Leah Kateb didn’t just emerge from Love Island USA as a fan favorite—she stepped off the villa set into a carefully curated style arc that feels more archival fashion editorial than reality TV starlet. Under the styling direction of Timothy Luke Garcia, her look has become a seamless blend of 2000s nostalgia, high-fashion vintage, and Gen Z instinct. With Roberto Cavalli halternecks, butterfly prints, and barely-there blush tones, Kateb is rewriting the fashion playbook for post-villa fame—and doing it with intentional grace.
From suitcase chaos to curated icon
Inside the Love Island villa, wardrobe planning is equal parts strategy and survival. Contestants are responsible for their own looks, often limited to whatever fits into a few overstuffed suitcases. For Kateb, that meant relying on a mix of personal vintage finds and looks borrowed from her sister’s archive—most notably a plunging silk Cavalli dress that caught immediate attention.
Post-show, her fashion identity has only grown sharper. With Garcia onboard, Kateb’s wardrobe began to echo editorial stylings more than red carpet basics. Every look since has felt like a page torn from a forgotten campaign—curated, referential, and entirely self-assured.
A stylist with a vision beyond trends
Timothy Luke Garcia’s eye for storytelling through clothing aligned perfectly with Kateb’s taste. Drawn to her sense of vulnerability, humor, and Y2K-inspired confidence, he approached her with a proposition: to turn her raw aesthetic into a polished narrative. Their first collaboration was for Coachella, where Leah wore an archived denim-on-denim look styled with metallic accents and a vintage butterfly belt.
From there, the duo deepened their process—sourcing early 2000s pieces from obscure listings, mixing textures like Shou Sugi Ban-style wood with sheer silks, and building looks that balanced cool-girl edge with soft femininity. Garcia’s background in editorial styling lent her public image a layer of thoughtful design that rarely graces reality stars this early in their careers.
Nostalgia, but smarter
Kateb’s fashion doesn’t just reference the 2000s—it refines them. She’s taken the tropes of that era—bandage dresses, low-rise silhouettes, pastel gloss, cowboy boots—and filtered them through a slower, more intentional lens. When she stepped out in a blush-toned bodycon mini with soft waves and matching strappy sandals, it didn’t feel costume-y. It felt cinematic.
Her makeup always plays into the fantasy: rosy cheeks, overlined nude lips, a whisper of glitter on the eyes. The look is playful, but the execution is tight. It’s this restraint—never too maximal, never overly ironic—that positions her less as a nostalgia chaser and more as someone who knows what to bring back, and how.
Fashion as friendship, not just performance
What elevates Kateb’s style beyond clothes is the way it interweaves with her relationships. Whether coordinating looks with her fellow Love Island alumni or sharing pieces with her sister, her fashion feels lived-in, communal, and emotionally connected. She’s become part of an emerging archetype: the fashion-forward friend group, where styling is as much about self-expression as it is about bonding.
This openness only adds to her appeal. She’s not distant or overproduced—her fashion is curated, but accessible. Her aesthetic says: “You can borrow this too,” rather than “You can’t sit with us.” That quality makes her a rare figure in the post-reality TV space—one who can serve a look, but also invite others into it.