Mexico GP Fashion Recap
The Mexico GP had colour, heat and atmosphere, but when it came to consistent standout styling, it felt a little uneven. Still — there were some real moments of beauty, and Alexandra once again carried the aesthetic for the weekend. Here’s the look-by-look.
Alexandra Saint Mleux
Alexandra stepped out in a layered white lace dress with soft tiers that moved beautifully. The texture and lightness read fresh under the sun, and a single, well-chosen accessory popped the look without stealing it. This was a quiet, romantic moment — one of the weekend’s strongest.
She followed with a sculpted red dress that felt immediately editorial. The silhouette was refined and the colour magnetic — a confident paddock statement that read powerful rather than performative. It’s the kind of look that photographs like a headline.
Lastly, she wore a soft yellow mini with delicate pleating closed her set. The cut was feminine and easy, and the colour choice was a smart counterpoint to the city’s vibrant backdrop. Alexandra showed range — romantic, bold, and playful — all in one weekend.
Verdict: Alexandra once again anchored the grid. Different moods, consistent control.
Rebecca Donaldson
Rebecca’s first look read structured-casual: a neutral utility dress with a defined waist and rolled sleeves, balanced by clean accessories. It was chic, functional, and very paddock-appropriate — polished without fuss.
Her second outfit leaned into monochrome minimalism: a fitted black top paired with an asymmetrical white skirt that added movement and a whisper of drama. The result was refined — minimalism done with purpose.
Verdict: Rebecca remained reliably elegant. No flash, plenty of polish.
Carmen Montero Mundt
Carmen opened with a relaxed baby-blue knit tucked into tailored striped trousers. The combo was quietly luxe — the sort of look that wins on nuance: texture, proportion and calm confidence.
Her second look upgraded to a soft blue suit with a tailored yet fluid cut. The fit softened traditional tailoring into something feminine and modern. It’s a welcome, subtle take on paddock tailoring — confident, but never loud.
Verdict: Carmen leaned into sophistication with ease — wearable, composed, and quietly memorable.
Lily Muni He
Lily opened the set with an oversized trench layered over relaxed separates — an on-the-go, fashion-week energy translated to the paddock. The proportions were playful, the styling intentionally nonchalant.
Next, she paired a bustier-style top over a long-sleeve base with wide-leg trousers — youthful, modern and casual in the best way. It felt like off-duty-chic: intentional but easy.
Her final look was a soft white knit with relaxed brown trousers — coffee-run comfort elevated by good tailoring and a calm palette. Simple, wearable, and quietly chic.
Verdict: Lily took a more relaxed, streetwear-leaning approach this weekend — fresh and approachable, though less editorial than some other looks.
Final Thoughts
Mexico had flashes of real style, but it didn’t feel as cohesively elevated as some other rounds. Alexandra delivered multiple moments that felt fully formed; Rebecca and Carmen favored quiet refinement; Lily brought easy, wearable vibes. Overall: potential everywhere, execution occasionally uneven — but still plenty of inspiration for the paddock wardrobe.
At SUBLIME STUDIOS, we celebrate those moments where fashion and motorsport intersect — the quiet, confident looks that whisper rather than shout. Want these aesthetics translated into everyday pieces? Our F1 Signature Tee is a subtle, timeless way to carry that paddock feeling off the track.