Gloss, glitter, and the girls who ran the 2000s
When you see leopard prints, bedazzled denim, or a flash of pink velour, you can’t help but think of the women who made them iconic. It was the era of low-rise jeans, flip phones, and lip gloss that never left your bag. Fashion back then wasn’t subtle; it was loud, fun, and full of personality. Camis with statement prints, Juicy tracksuits, and chunky highlights ruled every closet.
Kimora made streetwear feel luxurious, Paris turned every sidewalk into a runway, and Britney made denim on denim look legendary. These women weren’t just dressing up; they were defining what it meant to be confident. And honestly, that’s why their influence still hits. Every time we slip into a baby tee or spot a Juicy tracksuit, we’re reminded who did it first.
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Kimora Lee Simmons
Kimora Lee. (Photo: Getty Images)
Before the term “it girl” even existed, Kimora Lee Simmons was already living it. She wasn’t just wearing Y2K, she built it. As the face behind Baby Phat, Kimora turned streetwear into luxury, bringing rhinestones, pink velour, and a whole lot of attitude to the mainstream. Her designs weren’t about blending in; they were about being seen.
Every logo tee, fur-trimmed jacket, and bedazzled phone case carried her signature mix of glamour and power. Two decades later, Baby Phat still represents the original meaning of “doing the most”—and we’re all just catching up.
Kimora Lee Simmons proving pink-on-pink never misses (Photo: Evan Agostini/ImageDirect)
Channeling early-2000s glam in a purple corset and bootcut jeans (Photo by Johnny Nunez/WireImage)
Paris Hilton
Paris Hilton steps out with a classic Fendi Baguette, completing her early-2000s look (Photo by SGranitz/WireImage)
If Kimora built the runway, Paris Hilton walked it like she owned it. She was the face of early 2000s glamour with pink minis, rhinestone-studded phones, and handbags small enough to hold nothing but lip gloss and attitude. Her signature bowling bags became the ultimate It-girl accessory, swinging from her arm in every paparazzi shot.
Paris didn’t just follow trends; she set them, one outfit at a time. Her love for cropped tees with cheeky slogans, especially the unforgettable “Stop Being Desperate,” captured everything about Y2K confidence. Every look was a moment, and every sidewalk was her runway. She made velour tracksuits a lifestyle and turned fame itself into fashion’s boldest accessory. Long before influencer culture, Paris understood what it meant to be the brand.
Paris Hilton serving off-shoulder moment (Photo by Chris Polk/FilmMagic)
Baby tee and signature bowling bag (Photo by David Klein/Getty Images)
Britney Spears
Britney Spears channels peak Y2K style in a coordinated tracksuit with brown shades (Photo: Getty Images )
No one embodied the Y2K spirit quite like Britney. She wasn’t just killing it with her fits on stage, she was killing it offstage too. Think baby tees, pleated skirts, and bootcut jeans that made everyone want a sparkly belly chain and a flip phone. Britney’s style was that perfect mix of sweet and rebellious, like she could be your best friend and your style icon at the same time. Every outfit felt fun, fearless, and a little flirty—the kind of energy that still defines Y2K fashion today.
Britney Spears proves a simple layer over bootcut jeans can make a big Y2K statement (Photo: Getty Images)
When you see Britney, you see bootcut jeans (Photo: Getty Images)
Kim Kardashian
Kim Kardashian in a patterned cami paired with brown aviator shades (Photo by John Shearer/WireImage)
Before SKIMS and the billion-dollar empire, Kim was living the Y2K dream. Velour tracksuits, glossy lips, and all. Her style was built on confidence and curves, always camera-ready but never trying too hard. Being Paris Hilton’s assistant definitely had its perks; she learned early on that fashion was about presence as much as it was about clothes.
From Juicy sets and aviator sunglasses to oversized handbags and perfect blowouts, Kim turned everyday moments into style statements. Even her makeup, the smoky black eyeshadow, pink blush, and frosted lips, became part of her signature. She didn’t just follow the Y2K look; she perfected it, one glam photo op at a time.
Skinny jeans, tall boots, and Kim Kardashian (Photo: Getty Images )
Grey tones meet a fur scarf (Photo by John Shearer/WireImage)
Snooki
Snooki keeps it effortless in a long shirt and denim bag, totally Y2K street style (Photo by Larry Marano/FilmMagic)
No one did bold quite like Snooki. She brought a whole new kind of Y2K confidence, part glam, part chaos, and completely unforgettable. The leopard prints, the oversized hoops, the furry boots, and that iconic hair bump, it was camp in the best way possible. And of course, her signature Gucci Sukey Tote was never far from her arm. Snooki turned reality TV into a runway of her own, proving that fashion didn’t have to be polished to be iconic.
Her look was loud, proud, and full of personality, the kind that made you want to grab a can of hairspray and live a little louder too.
Black hair with brown highlights and all the early-2000s flair (Photo by Olivia Salazar/FilmMagic)
Big sunglasses, furry boots, and a Gucci Sukey Tote. Snooki showing exactly why she’s a Y2K style icon (Photo: Alemy)
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