RosalÃa continues to enjoy Barcelona after her performance at Primavera Sound. The artist is making the most of her stay in the Catalan capital. On Sunday she was seen at the Formula 1 GP in Montmeló, where her followers did not hesitate to ask her for photographs.
These days, the singer has also experimented with her much imitated and applauded style. The interpreter of Bizcochito has updated the schoolgirl aesthetic that she made fashionable with the launch of Motomami, changing the loafers that she has worn so much in the last year for mules.
But this has not been the only change in RosalÃa’s style. The singer has once again been inspired by the trends of the two thousandth century and she has recovered one of the pants that the artists of the time wore the most, including Christina Aguilera. There have been several occasions in which the Catalan has sought inspiration in the looks of the pop divas from more than twenty years ago.
Already in the Bagdad video clip, he recreated the iconic red latex jumpsuit that Britney Spears wore in Oops…I did it again. She, too, in Con Altura, wore a hairstyle with pompoms reminiscent of the American’s braids in… Baby One More Time and even slipped the stewardess uniform that Spears wore in Toxic.
But now her inspiration has been Aguilera with the lace-up pants, one of the pieces that marked Christina’s style during her album Stripped (2002). In the promotion of the album, the Dirrty interpreter constantly put on pants that stood out for their laces both on the leg and on the closure. In fact, she currently still wears them but in leather fabric.
More than twenty years later, RosalÃa wears these pants again, in denim and with the laces intertwined on the side. In this case, they are pink, matching a shirt she is wearing with several buttons undone.
Another attention-grabbing detail of the look is her hairstyle, with a pair of braided pigtails that have the same pink cord. A style that ends with pink makeup, with powdery pink shadows and nude lips, perfectly outlined to achieve the effect of more volume.