At the 2026 Met Gala, some big names in tech — including honorary co-chair and lead sponsor Jeff Bezos, and Mark Zuckerberg — skipped the red carpet walk. Those who did walk the steps, though, did so not wearing looks by the big fashion houses we’ve come to expect, but by mainly independent designers.

Instagram CEO Adam Mosseri wore Kartik Research, while VP of fashion Eva Chen wore Rachel Scott’s Proenza Schouler; both Stewart Butterfield (Slack CEO) and Selby Drummond (formerly of Snap and Bumble, now founder of tech venture firm Plum Alley) wore Conner Ives; and Charles Porch, who recently joined OpenAI as VP of global creative partnerships after a long tenure at Instagram, wore Kallmeyer’s first-ever men’s look.

These execs can afford to have any fashion brand in the world dress them. So why go for a smaller, indie designer on fashion’s biggest night of the year?

Attendees know that, once they set foot on the Met steps, their outfits will be analyzed and picked apart not just by the media, but by the millions of people who tune into the Met year after year. Opting for an emerging name signals a level of investment in fashion’s rising stars, rather than its established houses. And this year’s Met Gala arrived at a moment when tech moguls and CEOs are keen to emphasize the importance of taste, as AI tech becomes more and more accessible and user-friendly. Where better to show that you’re on the inside than on the steps of the Met Gala, surrounded by some of the most important people in fashion, while wearing an emerging brand that they have given their stamp of approval?

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Slack CEO Stewart Butterfield in Conner Ives (with wife Jen Rubio).

Photo: Michael Buckner/Getty Images

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Selby Drummond in Conner Ives (with husband Steven Dubb).

Photo: Poupay Jutharat

It’s where the big tech money really should be going, says designer Daniella Kallmeyer. “If the people with the most money, access and power aren’t supporting the arts and emerging brands and independent designers, then they’re just lifting up those who are already on top.”

Of course, many of the tech execs dressed in independent brands already have proven taste in fashion. Both Chen and Drummond come from the magazine world (Chen was editor-in-chief of Condé Nast-owned Lucky magazine, while Drummond was a longtime Vogue editor) and Porch has always straddled tech and culture in his roles at Instagram and now OpenAI. Mosseri, for his part, is no stranger to independent designers, and has worn brands including Tanner Fletcher, Wales Bonner and Bode for Met Galas past. (Zuckerberg, for what it’s worth, went with Prada after making his fashion week debut at the brand’s show earlier this year.)



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