Jennifer Lopez’s Latest Stage Look Is a Cyberspace Bodysuit From Ukrainian Label TTSWTRS
She joins David Guetta for a surprise performance

Reported by Harper's Bazaar.
Jennifer Lopez doesn't do understated. So when she crashed David Guetta's Stade de France show in Paris over the weekend — joining him to perform their collaborative single "Save Me Tonight" — she arrived in something that felt less like a costume and more like a statement about where fashion is heading.
Lopez wore a plunging bodysuit and oversized lacquer jacket from Ukrainian label TTSWTRS (pronounced "Tattoo Sweaters"), both pulled from its Time collection. According to Harper's Bazaar, the line draws inspiration from vintage computer monitors and the early internet — and it shows. The leotard was printed with data from a so-called "bio machine," its surface mapped with a neon cyberspace grid that followed the contours of her body like a second skin. The matching glossy zip-up jacket echoed the same digital body-outline, making the whole look feel like something between a rave in 1997 and a sci-fi film from 2045. She grounded it with sheer black tights, little black boots, a sleek high ponytail, diamond earrings, and makeup that went fully in — long lashes, bronzed shadow, lined lips.
From the Red Carpet to the Stage
The timing here is worth noting. Lopez has spent recent weeks on a heavy press circuit for her new film Office Romance, showing up in couture gowns, vintage pieces, and enough sparkle to blind a front row. Paris marked a deliberate gear shift — actor mode off, performer mode on. She even pulled out "On the Floor" for the crowd, reminding everyone that a track from 2011 still hits in a stadium.
But the real story is TTSWTRS getting this kind of global stage moment. The Ukrainian independent label built its identity around concept-driven, body-conscious design — exactly the kind of brand that deserves more than a niche following. Lopez wearing it at one of Europe's biggest venues isn't just a styling choice; it's an endorsement with reach.
When the biggest pop star on the planet chooses an independent Ukrainian label over a luxury house for a stadium show, that's not a coincidence — it's a signal of where fashion credibility is shifting.
Read the original at Harper's Bazaar.


