Florence Pugh wore a totally sheer Valentino skirt and it's her best look yet
Every awards season, there’s one standout star who rules the red carpet. This year’s undisputed winner? Florence Pugh.
The actress, best known for her performances in Little Women and Don't Worry Darling, has appeared on the red carpet during this year's awards season in an array of jaw-dropping looks - and she's just getting started.
Ahead of the Oscars (we are already buzzing to see what she serves on the red carpet), the actress might have given us her best look yet. Florence attended the Valentino presentation in Paris in a totally sheer crop top and full-length skirt, offset with a Valentino bag, spiky topknot and glowing skin. Yes, Flo.
It seems that Florence is keen to take risks with her fashion - fans will remember how the British actress attended the Academy's 13th annual Governors Awards in Los Angeles wearing an almost-completely-sheer white Victoria Beckham gown with polka dot details.
And last summer, Florence got fans talking thanks to her hot pink tulle Valentino gown at the fashion house's Haute Couture show at Milan Fashion Week in July.
A few days after posting the look on her Instagram page, she hit back at the "vulgar men" in her comments section. "Why are you so scared of breasts? Small? Large? Left? Right? Only one? Maybe none? What. Is. So. Terrifying?" she asked in part of her lengthy follow-up post.
In an interview with The Telegraph, Florence Pugh said that when she was 19 and cast as a pop star in a television series in Los Angeles, she was told that she needed to alter her appearance.
"All the things that they were trying to change about me—whether it was my weight, my look, the shape of my face, the shape of my eyebrows—that was so not what I wanted to do, or the industry I wanted to work in," Florence said. The series was never picked up, so Florence went back to England and was eventually cast in Lady Macbeth, which really got her noticed and jump-started her movie stardom. Always listen to your gut, folks!
Here, we chart every single time Florence slayed the style stakes. And we haven't even had the Oscars yet.




















