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In the second week of the , an array of fashion moments occurred that caught our attention, from rapper and everything entrepreneur commemorating an Olympian’s most memorable moment to athletes wearing fine jewelry pieces to add to their big competition day. This year’s Olympics being set in Paris, “The City of Lights,” feels adjacent to fashion week. These style moments from Black athletes and celebs aren’t lost on us as we watch the prestigious sporting events, rooting for everyone Black throughout the diaspora.

It’s refreshing to see these athletes express themselves however they see fit through small accessories, sometimes thousands of dollars, like ’s piece below. These style moments mark history for this generation, much like the looks that Flo Jo wore in her 1980s gold-winning moments. We’re witnessing some of the most special moments of history adorned in style.



won the 100-meter race for the USA, making him the first American man to win it in 20 years, let alone a Black man! Snoop Dogg being a host at the Olympics is the best thing to happen as he’s been showing up and showing out in playful outfits like the one below honoring Lyle and immortalizing him in his winning moment on a custom T-shirt and red, white, and blue bomber jacket in the same print. To accessorize, Snoop added a giant Eiffel Tower chain on his neck and a pair of sunglasses shaped like the Olympic logo. While watching the Women’s Floor Exercise Final of gymnastics, we saw cheer in support of the USA, wearing a navy blue A-line dress with red and white stitching at the top of the dress designed by that is available now for $198 on the site.

On her waist, she layered a striped blue and white button-down over her dress. During her first round of the women’s 100-meter race, Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce wore a $185,000 watch by Richard Mille. Her green hair flew through the wind, and her watch zoomed by in a few still shots, such as the one below.

The orange and gray colorway went well with her yellow uniform. The intricate details in the watch’s body alone made us understand why Fraser-Pryce would flex it on her historic run. For her 200-meter run, won the silver medal while wearing the daintiest gold necklace.

It was so small it could almost be classified as a choker necklace. It added such a feminine and elegant energy to her Saint Lucia blue and yellow uniform. She also added a tiny pair of gold hoop earrings with a small diamond stud stacked over a hoop on one ear.

At the men’s 400-meter final, Quincy Hall won the gold, wearing not one but two gold chains. One remained plain in a rope-like texture, while the other layered on top featured a diamond-encrusted letter “A” on a classic-styled chain. By the end of the race, he was flexing three gold pieces.

While at the gymnastics finals, Louis Vuitton Men’s creative director wore an LV monogrammed pair of shorts in a brown-on-brown colorway paired with a script-printed logo sweater, also in brown. He added his Kenzo Paris baseball hat in a beige shade and orange-tinted Louis Vuitton aviator-shaped sunglasses. The monochromatic look was far from boring.

At the men’s 200-meter final, Letsile Tebogo wore a pair of orange polka-dot track and field sprint spikes that are currently retailing for $190 on their site. One of the shoes reads the date “23-12-1980,” which is his mother’s birthdate. After winning the race, Tebogo took his shoes off and wrapped them around his neck to showcase this date, and he wrapped his flag around his shoulders.

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