Jennifer Lopez Wears Lace-Trimmed Black Bra in May 13 Look

Jennifer Lopez Wears Lace-Trimmed Black Bra in May 13 Look

jennifer lopez put a lace-trimmed black satin bra under a khaki double-breasted blazer in a May 13 Instagram video, then paired it with matching pleated trousers in New York City. The clip came after an earlier appearance that same day at Netflix's Upfront, where she shifted from archival Jean Paul Gaultier into a different high-visibility look for Office Romance promotion.

May 13 in New York

Lopez captioned the video, "Hi New York," and set it to Lady Gaga and Doechii's single "Runway." The look leaned on contrast: a boxy jacket over the lace-trimmed bra, open-toe platform heels, a leopard print handbag, aviator sunglasses, gold jewelry, a chunky chainlink necklace, and hoop earrings. Her low-waist trousers also revealed a pair of boxers, a styling choice that kept the outfit in the same stripped-down register as the bra.

Rob Zangardi and Mariel Haenn assisted the look, continuing a wardrobe run that treated New York as a two-outfit staging ground. For readers tracking Lopez's fashion choices as part of her public rollout, the key shift is not just the bra-and-blazer pairing; it is the speed with which she moved from a formal event look to a more exposed street video in the same city, on the same day.

Jean Paul Gaultier hours earlier

Hours earlier, Lopez attended Netflix's Upfront in New York City wearing archival Jean Paul Gaultier from the designer's Spring/Summer 2004 collection. That outfit included a plunging fitted jacket, a ruffled satin pencil skirt, a built-in corset, metallic open-toe stilettos, and pearl earrings, and she went braless for the appearance. Put beside the Instagram clip, the day read like a controlled fashion campaign rather than a one-off post.

The two looks also gave her more than style range: they kept Office Romance in the frame while Lopez and Brett Goldstein promoted the upcoming film. She is credited as a producer on the project, which makes the New York appearances part of the film's publicity work, not just personal image-building.

Office Romance rollout

Lopez told People about Goldstein, "We had great chemistry to begin with," and added, "It just grew as we did the film together." That language matters because the publicity push is selling the pairing as much as the movie itself, and Lopez is helping carry that message both as co-star and producer.

For anyone watching the campaign, the practical read is simple: New York delivered two sharply different Lopez looks in one day, and both were tied to the same promotion cycle. If Office Romance is going to travel as a public-facing title, this is the template — fashion-first visibility, a co-star pairing, and a social post that keeps the film in motion between formal appearances.

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