9 Vogue-Approved Ways on How to Style Activewear
From hoodies and sweats to the summer-friendly bike short.

Reported by Vogue.
Activewear has fully escaped the gym — and honestly, it's not going back. According to Vogue, pieces like leggings, track pants, and sneakers are now load-bearing elements of the modern wardrobe, fueled by cult collaborations (Loewe x On Running, Wales Bonner x Adidas) and the relentless sell-out cycles of Lululemon and Nike. We're spending real money on this stuff. It deserves more than a spin class.
The key isn't dressing down — it's dressing through. Activewear works in everyday outfits not because anything goes, but because the contrast is doing something. A technical piece next to something soft or structured creates that specific low-effort-high-result energy that no amount of trying too hard can replicate. Call it nonchalance; call it the whole point.
Nine Ways to Make It Work
Bike shorts earn their keep in a monochromatic moment — same-tone tee, ballet flats, raffia tote, done. Joggers go from sloppy to sharp the second a button-up and sandals enter the picture. Track pants get an upgrade with an oversized knit and crisp white sneakers — lean into the boyish ease rather than fight it. For sport shorts, think Miu Miu energy: a polo, soccer shorts, deck shoes. The tension is the look. A sporty bomber moves into summer seamlessly over a tank and lightweight midi skirt. And if you're sleeping on the tennis dress, wake up — a white mini with a blouson jacket and statement sneakers is a full fashion moment, not a court outfit.
Smaller activewear pieces punch above their weight, too. A cropped sports top adds dimension and a clean silhouette to an otherwise ordinary outfit. A hoodie — especially something like Bad Bunny's butter-yellow Zara collab — is an instant mood with brown jeans and flip flops. Even your sneakers, pulled off the track and paired with Bermuda shorts and a tank, land as polished rather than pedestrian. The formula is always the same: one athletic piece, grounded by something that has nothing to do with the gym.
Activewear stopped being a concession to comfort a long time ago — worn right, it's one of the sharpest tools in the wardrobe.
Read the original at Vogue.


