Ice Spice Turns NYLON’s September 2025 Cover Into a Fashion & Culture Manifesto
Ice Spice stuns in NYLON Sept 2025, opening up on rap, respect, and retirement—while serving fearless high-fashion looks.
Ice Spice doesn’t just wear fashion—she weaponizes it. In her September 2025 cover story for NYLON Magazine, shot by Lea Winkler, the Bronx-born rapper proves she’s as fearless in couture as she is in the booth. The spread is equal parts interview and performance art, marrying confessional honesty with maximalist styling.
On Fame, Rap Beefs, and Retirement
Inside the feature, Ice Spice speaks candidly about the pressures of rap stardom. She admits the rap world hasn’t always respected her as a lyricist: “People love to underestimate me. But that’s fuel—I’ve been proving them wrong since day one.”
She also addresses industry drama and rap beefs, noting she’s learned to stay focused on her craft: “I don’t let the noise distract me. I’m building something bigger than a headline.”
And while she has floated the idea of retiring by 35, she admits it might not be realistic: “I said 35, but honestly? Music is in me. Who knows where I’ll be then—I just know I’ll be in control of my story.”
Fashion That Speaks Louder Than Words
The editorial itself amplifies her message. From rooftop fur to squatting in silver stilettos, Ice Spice turns every frame into a moodboard of rebellion. Each look feels like a character pulled from a manga-meets-Moschino fever dream.
The outfits include:
- A white cropped top with a royal blue train-skirt—pure editorial fantasy.
- A black bra top with an oversized white bow paired with a mini skirt printed upside-down with “NEW YORK CITY”—a playful flip of her roots.
- A silver-gray zippered bodysuit that screams cyber siren.
- A graphic tank and studded belt combo that channels early-2000s MTV.
- A cream fur coat over a pink top, styled with chunky necklaces and patterned heels, delivering unapologetic maximalism.
- Even the black cat that appears in one frame feels intentional—mysterious, sleek, and slightly menacing, much like Ice herself.
The Bigger Picture
This spread positions Ice Spice at the intersection of streetwear, performance art, and pop culture commentary. Every outfit is a lyric, every pose a beat drop. Her NYLON cover story doubles as both a fashion fantasy and a declaration of independence.
She isn’t just in the rap game—she’s rewriting its style playbook.









