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These Stunning Met Gala Looks Had a Secret Interior Design Twist

Yes, Demi Moore wore a wallpaper dress.

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Ah, that first Monday in May: The birds are twittering, the flowers are blooming, and, look, is that Cardi B getting a massive tulle ball gown fluffed out by 10 assistants? (Yep, we counted.) It must be the 2024 Met Gala. This annual spring rite, the kickoff extravaganza to the public opening of the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s annual spring Costume Institute exhibition, is one of the most talked-about moments on the fashion calendar. But this year’s red carpet parade—themed the Garden of Time in keeping with the exhibition’s title, “Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion”—offered plenty of interior design Easter eggs too. From vintage wallpaper to haute bedsheets (yes), these six Met Gala red carpet moments proved that inspiration can be found right at home.

Best Wallpaper: Demi Moore in Harris Reed

the 2024 met gala celebrating sleeping beauties reawakening fashion arrivals
Dia Dipasupil//Getty Images

Don’t throw away your old wallpaper! It may just have a second life as an ultrachic gown. Case in point, actress Demi Moore, who wore 60-year-old Fromental wallpaper as couture. The transformation comes courtesy of British-American designer Harris Reed, who turned the dead stock paper into a sculptural gown resembling a flower blossoming (with thorns, naturally) from the waist up, and then wilting near the base. “It’s 1,100 hours of silk embroidery that we’ve repurposed into this idea of her blooming on the carpet,” Reed told model Ashley Graham in a Vogue livestream interview. Moore also wore a showstopping new necklace from Cartier, which Reed considered from the very beginning when designing the gown.

Best Bedsheets: Maria Sharapova in Prabal Gurung

the 2024 met gala celebrating sleeping beauties reawakening fashion arrivals
Taylor Hill//Getty Images

There are few people in the world who could make a bed sheet look chic on the Met Gala’s red carpet. Two of those people are tennis star Maria Sharapova and fashion designer Prabal Gurung. In keeping with the Costume Institute’s exhibition theme, “Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion,” Gurung partnered with Boll & Branch—the home brand known for its super-comfy, organic bedding, sheets, and towels—to create a daffodil yellow gown out of 20 yards of Boll & Branch cotton fabric. Apparently it took more than 300 hours to create the hand-sewn number…a number that also conveniently corresponds to the amount of sleep Met Gala attendees will inevitably need today (ideally in Boll & Branch bedding, of course!).

Best Xeriscaping: Tyla in Balmain

the 2024 met gala
Dia Dipasupil//Getty Images

The dress code for this year’s Met Gala red carpet was “The Garden of Time,” so it was only appropriate that Balmain would transform South African singer Tyla into a ravishing human hourglass or—if you are obsessed with gardening like we are—the world’s most stylish irrigation-free landscape system. Though your home xeriscape will likely be dotted with cactus, agave, and sage, Tyla’s strapless, mermaid-style gown was covered in three colors of sand and “micro-crystal studs,” per Vogue, and was so delicate that she had to be carried into the soiree. This year’s theme “ignited my imagination,” Balmain’s creative director, Olivier Rousteing, told Vogue. And if your imagination’s not fired up to go design your very own desert garden, we don’t know what will.

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Best Pattern: Deborah Roberts in Harlem Toile

the 2024 met gala celebratingsleeping beauties reawakening fashion
Jeff Kravitz//Getty Images

Long live Harlem Toile! Interior designer and ELLE DECOR A-List designer Sheila Bridges created the iconic pattern almost 20 years ago, and it remains relevant to this day. The motif—which reinterprets 18th-century French toile to incorporate Black characters—has made its way onto plates, candles, robes, speakers, and even the Met Gala. ABC News journalist Deborah Roberts wore the print as a gown to the event—a collaboration between Bridges and bridal designer Mark Ingram. “When we talk about a garden theme, I just think this is so perfect,” Roberts said in a video posted to Ingram’s Instagram. “Most importantly, it’s a gown that I’ve owned—so sustainability is part of the deal.”

Best Faux Bois: Taylor Russell in Loewe

the 2024 met gala
Mike Coppola/MG24//Getty Images

Bones and All actress Taylor Russell made her Met Gala debut this year—no surprise, she opted for a custom Loewe gown. A global brand ambassador for the Spanish label, Russell opened Loewe’s spring 2023 ready-to-wear show in Paris and continues her partnership with creative director Jonathan Anderson here. The inspiration? “I’ve always wanted to be a tree,” she said jokingly in a Vogue livestream interview with model Ashley Graham and actress Gwendoline Christie. Don’t be fooled, though: The sculpted corset may look like real wood, but it’s a trompe-l’oeil effect. Loewe used a printing technique to mimic the look of wood grain and marquetry—so Russell could climb the Met steps san splinters.

Best Lalique-Adjacent: Elle Fanning in Balmain

the 2024 met gala
Taylor Hill//Getty Images

OK, so actress Elle Fanning’s sheer gown wasn’t really made of glass, but it certainly fooled us! The actress wore custom Balmain, which was made with organza and layers of resin for a glass-spun effect. The cherry on top were the two resin birds perched on either shoulder, which evoke the timeless, graceful sculpture of a heritage glassmaker like Lalique.

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Helena Madden
Market Editor

Helena Madden is ELLE DECOR’s market editor, and covers all things product and trend, from flatware and furnishings to kitchen and bath. She previously worked as a staff writer at Robb Report, where she covered luxury news with a focus on interior design.

Headshot of Anna Fixsen
Anna Fixsen
Deputy Digital Editor

Anna Fixsen, Deputy Digital Editor at ELLE DECOR, focuses on how to share the best of the design world through in-depth reportage and online storytelling. Prior to joining the staff, she has held positions at Architectural Digest, Metropolis, and Architectural Record magazines. elledecor.com 

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