The Aussie Footwear Brand Suddenly Appearing On Stylish Celebrities Across The Globe

Australian fashion has always had a way of travelling quietly. It does not always arrive with spectacle. Sometimes it slips into the wardrobes of women who know exactly what they like, appears on a major press tour, turns up at Coachella, and suddenly everyone is asking the same thing: where are those boots from? Over…

Australian fashion has always had a way of travelling quietly. It does not always arrive with spectacle. Sometimes it slips into the wardrobes of women who know exactly what they like, appears on a major press tour, turns up at Coachella, and suddenly everyone is asking the same thing: where are those boots from?

Over the past few months, Bared Footwear has become one of the Australian brands gaining serious attention beyond home soil. The Melbourne-born footwear label has long had a loyal following among women who want shoes that look polished without feeling punishing, but its recent celebrity moments have moved it into a different conversation entirely.

The biggest signal came when Meryl Streep stepped out in Bared’s Mino Black Leather & Hardware Heeled Boots during The Devil Wears Prada 2 press circuit. For a film franchise so closely tied to fashion, style codes and the power of a perfectly chosen accessory, the moment felt especially sharp. Streep’s look was sleek, grown-up and quietly commanding, exactly the kind of styling that makes a black boot feel less like a supporting piece and more like the thing that pulls the whole outfit together.

And then there was Alix Earle at Coachella. While Streep brought polished New York press-tour energy, Earle took Bared into the desert with the Hillstar Black Leather Knee High Boots, styling them with micro shorts and a festival-ready look that felt very 2026. The same brand, two completely different aesthetics. One was refined, elegant and cinematic. The other was high-impact, youthful and made for the scroll. Together, they showed exactly why Bared is resonating now.

Mino Boot

Why Bared Footwear Is Suddenly Everywhere

Celebrity dressing has changed. The most stylish women are no longer only choosing pieces because they photograph well. They also need to move, travel, stand, walk and keep going. A shoe that looks incredible for five minutes is one thing. A shoe that can handle a full press day, a festival field or a long night out is something else entirely.

That is where Bared has found its sweet spot. Founded by podiatrist-turned-entrepreneur Anna Baird, the brand is built around the idea that beautiful shoes should not require a comfort compromise. Its styles are fashion-led, but the hidden difference is in the construction: biomechanical footbeds, arch support, cushioning and fit features designed to make heels, boots, flats and loafers more wearable in real life.

It is a formula that feels very aligned with the way women are shopping now. Less impulse. More intention. Less “this looks good in a mirror for ten seconds.” More “will I actually wear this all day?” If you are currently editing your own closet with that same mindset, our guide to how to build a wardrobe from scratch is a good place to start.

The Celebrity Appeal Is In The Range

What makes Bared’s recent celebrity run interesting is not just the names, but the range of personal style attached to them. Meryl Streep, Alix Earle, Kate Hudson, Jameela Jamil and Dylan Mulvaney do not dress the same way. Their wardrobes speak different languages. Some are polished and classic. Some are playful. Some are bold, directional and built for attention.

That variety matters. It suggests Bared is not having a single viral moment tied to one trend or one outfit. Instead, the brand is appearing across different style worlds because the shoes sit in that useful middle ground between statement and practicality.

The Mino Boot has the sleek shape of a modern heeled ankle boot, with enough edge to work with tailoring, denim, long coats or evening pieces. The Hillstar boot, with its knee-high silhouette and removable harness detail, leans into the current appetite for moto-inspired footwear without tipping into costume territory. Both feel current, but not disposable.

That is the kind of purchase that makes sense in a modern wardrobe. If you are trying to buy fewer but better pieces, it fits naturally beside the principles in our Ultimate Capsule Wardrobe Australia guide and our edit of the best basics to buy once and keep forever.

The Return Of The Wearable Statement Shoe

For a while, fashion footwear was split into two camps: sensible shoes you could wear all day, or dramatic shoes you accepted would hurt. Bared’s growing appeal sits right in the collapse of that divide. The modern statement shoe still needs shape, attitude and polish, but it also needs to survive real life.

This is especially true as boots become one of the most important styling pieces of the season. A black boot can change the feeling of an outfit instantly. It can toughen up a slip dress, sharpen a soft knit, ground a mini skirt, or make simple denim feel more deliberate. It is one of those wardrobe pieces that does a lot of work without demanding too much effort.

That is also why celebrity styling around Bared feels so relevant. Streep’s press-tour boot was not about chasing a micro trend. It was about confidence, proportion and polish. Earle’s Coachella boot, meanwhile, tapped into the knee-high boot revival in a way that felt wearable beyond a festival. Both looks prove that the right footwear can carry an outfit without overpowering it.

For more on making trends work in a way that still feels like you, read our guide to what to do when fashion trends don’t suit you.

How To Wear Bared Boots Now

The easiest way to style Bared’s celebrity-approved boots is to treat them as the anchor of the outfit.

For a Meryl-inspired look, pair a sleek black ankle boot with tailored trousers, a longline blazer, a fine knit or a crisp shirt. Keep the palette simple and let the silhouette do the work. This is the kind of outfit that feels expensive because it is restrained, not because it is loud. Our guide to how to look expensive on a normal budget follows the same idea: strong basics, clean lines and pieces that fit properly.

For a more relaxed take, wear a knee-high boot with a mini skirt, oversized knit, wool coat or denim cut-offs when the weather allows. The key is balance. If the boot has hardware or a heavier sole, keep the rest of the outfit clean. If the outfit is soft or minimal, let the boot add structure.

You can also use a black boot to refresh pieces you already own. A white shirt, straight-leg jean and great boot is one of the easiest formulas in any wardrobe. For more ways to make a simple staple feel styled, read our guide to how to style a white shirt.

Why This Moment Matters For Australian Fashion

There is something satisfying about seeing an Australian brand appear in global celebrity wardrobes without losing what made it appealing in the first place. Bared has not built its identity around being impossible to wear. Its point of difference is almost the opposite: shoes that look stylish, but are engineered for the reality of long days, busy schedules and women who do not want to choose between comfort and taste.

That feels very now. The most desirable wardrobe pieces in 2026 are not necessarily the loudest or most recognisable. They are the pieces that make getting dressed easier. The ones you reach for repeatedly. The ones that hold an outfit together and still feel good hours later.

For Bared Footwear, the last few months have been a clear reminder that practical does not have to mean plain, and comfortable does not have to mean invisible. Sometimes the most stylish thing a shoe can do is keep up.

Where To Shop

You can explore the full Bared Footwear range at baredfootwear.com, including the Mino Heeled Boots, the Mino Black Leather & Hardware Heeled Boots and the Hillstar Black Leather Knee High Boots.

FAQ: Bared Footwear

Is Bared Footwear Australian?

Yes. Bared Footwear is an Australian footwear brand founded by podiatrist-turned-entrepreneur Anna Baird.

Why is Bared Footwear popular?

Bared is known for combining fashion-led shoe design with hidden comfort features, including biomechanical footbeds and supportive fit details. The brand has gained extra global attention after being worn by celebrities including Meryl Streep and Alix Earle.

Which Bared boots did Meryl Streep wear?

Meryl Streep has been spotted wearing Bared’s Mino boot during The Devil Wears Prada 2 press activity.

Which Bared boots did Alix Earle wear at Coachella?

Alix Earle wore Bared’s Hillstar Black Leather Knee High Boots at Coachella 2026.

Are Bared shoes comfortable?

Bared shoes are designed with podiatrist-led comfort features, including hidden support and biomechanical footbeds. As with any shoe, comfort will depend on your foot shape, size and preferred fit, but the brand is specifically built around making stylish shoes more wearable.

Read Next

If you are refining your personal style, read How to Build a Wardrobe From Scratch, The Grown-Up Guide to Clothes You Actually Wear.

For timeless styling foundations, visit The Classic Wardrobe 101, The Timeless Pieces Every Woman Should Own.

For buying less and wearing more, read The Ultimate Capsule Wardrobe Australia, What You Actually Need In 2026.

For making trends feel more personal, explore What To Do When Fashion Trends Don’t Suit You.


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