Brad Pitt and Ines de Ramon Embrace Summer Neutrals at the French Open
Sitting courtside for the women’s singles final, Brad Pitt and Ines de Ramon were easy, breezy, and matchy-matchy.

Reported by Vogue.
There's a specific kind of couple style that requires zero effort to look like it required significant effort — and Brad Pitt and Ines de Ramon have apparently mastered it. The two turned up at Roland-Garros 2026 to watch 19-year-old Mirra Andreeva claim her first Grand Slam title at the Philippe-Chatrier court, and according to Vogue, they did it in a coordinated neutral moment that felt less planned, more inevitable.
Pitt kept it textbook summer: pale blue cotton shirt with the sleeves rolled, wide-leg beige linen trousers, blue-lensed aviators in gold frames. A Vacheron Constantin watch and a gold signet ring closed the look — minimal, considered, the kind of dressing that reads effortless precisely because every piece is doing exactly its job.
Her Half of the Equation
De Ramon, a jewelry designer, brought the more interesting silhouette. She paired a pleated olive leather jacket with a cream embroidered maxi dress — lacy cap sleeves, floral inserts — and stacked the accessories accordingly: pink-tinted sunglasses, a rose gold watch, emerald earrings, a matching pendant, and a cream Chloé Paddington bag. The effect was tactile and layered without ever tipping into maximalism. For someone who designs jewelry professionally, the restraint is the flex.
The couple, together since 2022, tend to keep their public appearances low-key and well-spaced. They showed up at the Mercedes-AMG World Premiere last month and were spotted earlier this year on the Greek island of Hydra, where Pitt was on location filming The Riders. Roland-Garros is the kind of high-profile event that doubles as a fashion moment even when you're technically just watching tennis — and these two understood the assignment without appearing to try.
When summer dressing works this well, it's because the pieces are simple enough to coordinate and specific enough to feel personal — which is exactly the lesson here.
Read the original at Vogue.


