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FashionPodcastsAndrew Mukamal and the Rise of Method Dressing
Andrew Mukamal and the Rise of Method Dressing
Fashion

The Business of Fashion Podcast (Spotify landing)

Andrew Mukamal and the Rise of Method Dressing

The Business of Fashion Podcast (Spotify landing)
•February 27, 2026•0 min
0
The Business of Fashion Podcast (Spotify landing)•Feb 27, 2026

Why It Matters

Method dressing transforms red‑carpet events into strategic marketing assets, deepening brand‑film synergies and creating continuous consumer touchpoints. This shift reshapes how studios, fashion houses, and stylists collaborate, driving new revenue streams and cultural relevance.

Key Takeaways

  • •Method dressing blends character, fashion history, brand partnerships.
  • •Apprenticeship remains primary training path for stylists.
  • •Barbie tour used 1950s-60s fashion references for authenticity.
  • •Wuthering Heights styling shifted to gothic Victorian aesthetic.
  • •Red carpet becomes continuous narrative, extending film marketing.

Pulse Analysis

The rise of "method dressing" marks a pivotal evolution in film promotion, where the red carpet is no longer a static showcase but a narrative extension of the movie itself. By researching period‑specific mood boards—like the 1950s‑60s inspirations for Barbie—or sourcing vintage Victorian pieces for Wuthering Heights, stylists craft visual stories that echo a film's themes. This intentionality deepens audience immersion, turning each appearance into a micro‑advertisement that reinforces plot, character, and brand identity long after the cameras stop rolling.

From a business perspective, method dressing redefines the relationship between stylists, studios, and fashion houses. Apprenticeship‑based training equips stylists with the agility to pivot under tight deadlines, while studios gain a reliable conduit to integrate product placements seamlessly. Fashion brands benefit from heightened exposure as their heritage or contemporary lines become integral to a film's visual lexicon, creating mutually beneficial partnerships that extend beyond a single premiere. This collaborative ecosystem fuels new revenue models, from exclusive capsule collections to co‑branded marketing campaigns.

Looking ahead, the method dressing framework is likely to influence broader celebrity marketing strategies. As audiences demand authentic, story‑driven content, the line between personal style and brand narrative will blur further, prompting data‑driven styling decisions that align with consumer sentiment. Stylists who master this narrative‑centric approach will become pivotal cultural curators, shaping not only fashion trends but also the way stories are sold in an increasingly fragmented media landscape.

Episode Description

Over the past two years, press tours for films like Barbie and Wuthering Heights have become strategic fashion narratives — moments that extend a film’s story far beyond the screen.

At the centre of that shift is Andrew Mukamal, the stylist for Margot Robbie who has become synonymous with what’s become known as “method dressing” … aligning a film’s character, fashion history and brand partnerships into a cohesive red carpet story.

“Method dressing, to me, is really just about putting a bit of extra thought and consideration into what you wear,” says Mukamal. “With modern marketing, the way people consume media and the evolution of the ‘super-press tour’, it’s now one of the options for how to approach this.”

This week on The BoF Podcast, Andrew Mukamal joins BoF founder and CEO Imran Ahmed to speak about the rise of the super press tour, the business dynamics between stylists, studios and fashion houses, and how method dressing has reshaped celebrity marketing.

Key Insights: 

Mukamal’s entry into the industry is rooted in assisting and learning on set, from photo shoots to the unglamorous logistics of the fashion wardrobe, and he argues that an apprenticeship remains the clearest training ground. The work is emotional, interpersonal and fast-moving; assistants learn by seeing how decisions get made under pressure. “The only way to really learn how to deal with those things is to be part of a team where you’re seeing all of that happen,” he says. “You have to be very limber and flexible and ready for somebody to call you and say, ‘Maybe we need to pivot.’”

Mukamal defines method dressing as intentionality, not a gimmick. “Method dressing is just about putting a bit of extra thought and consideration into getting dressed – you’re not just grabbing something off a rack.” In his view, most actors are already doing it because red-carpet presentation is fundamentally different from everyday life; the difference is whether you use that gap to build a narrative. “They don’t walk around their normal lives looking anything like what you see them on these public carpets,” he says. Done well, he positions it as performance and persuasion — “a living, breathing billboard” that sustains attention between the trailer and the release, and gives audiences “a daily reminder” of the story they’re being invited into.

The Barbie tour was more than a marketing stunt.. Mukamal went back to the original mood boards of the Mattel designers to find the high-fashion references they used in the 1950s and 1960s. He explains, “Putting myself back in their heads and saying, ‘OK … What was the brand that they were inspired by for this Barbie?’ Now I need to go to that brand and [close] the loop. It was kind of just magic.”

After the global vibrancy of Barbie, Mukamal shifted into a dark, psychological aesthetic to match the tone of Wuthering Heights. He describes this evolution as a “complete gear shift,” returning to his “fashion goth” roots to build a narrative grounded in the 1847 novel’s intensity. By sourcing vintage Victorian accessories and collaborating with designer Dilara Findikoglu, he orchestrated a moment that merged archival history with a “tone of the coolness and, like, darkness” appropriate for the story.

Mukamal frames styling as an apprenticeship-based industry where you absorb judgement, communication and crisis management by watching someone else do it – and then debriefing afterwards. He says, “The only way to really learn how to deal with those things is to be part of a team where you’re seeing all of that happen.” He adds: “Stick around, because you didn’t learn everything in a year or two … I really am a tiny little tadpole in this pond, and I should keep learning while I can.”

Additional Resources:

What Makes a Red Carpet Moment in 2024 | BoF 

Have We Hit Peak Red Carpet? | BoF 

Case Study | How to Create Cultural Moments on Any Budget | BoF 

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