The Reign of the Cutout
Walk the steamy, sun-drenched runways of Miami Swim Week, and one silhouette dominates: the cutout. For years, the one-piece swimsuit with strategically placed slashes, keyholes, and voids has been the undisputed star. From the intricate, macrame-like designs of PatBO to the vibrant, body-hugging styles of Luli Fama, designers have explored every possible iteration. Asymmetrical slices across the torso, daring plunges held together by a single ring, and delicate side-ties have all paraded down the catwalk. At first, it seemed like a fleeting, Instagram-driven fad. The style is, after all, notoriously impractical for actual swimming or achieving an even tan. But season after season, it has not only persisted but evolved, becoming more audacious
and more integrated into designers' core collections. Its endurance has transformed it from a simple trend into a much more significant phenomenon—a piece of fashion that tells a story about where the market is heading.
An Expression of Consumer Confidence
The cutout swimsuit isn't just about showing skin; it’s about projecting confidence. In the post-pandemic era, it became a uniform for what trend forecasters call “revenge dressing”—the desire to be seen, to celebrate the body, and to make a statement after years of caution and confinement. A simple bikini is functional; a cutout maillot is sculptural, architectural, and declarative. It says, “Look at me.” This aesthetic choice doubles as a powerful market signal. Industry buyers and analysts watch the prevalence and daring of cutouts to gauge consumer mood. A market dominated by bold, complex cutouts suggests a confident consumer base, one that is optimistic and willing to spend on high-fashion, non-essential items. Conversely, a retreat to more modest, classic silhouettes might signal economic anxiety or a shift toward conservative spending habits. The cutout has become a barometer for risk-taking, both for the person wearing the suit and the brands selling it.
The Business of a Bodysuit
This is where fashion becomes finance. The data points collected at Miami Swim Week don't just stay in Miami. Major retail buyers from department stores like Nordstrom and online powerhouses like Revolve attend these shows not just to see pretty clothes, but to place multi-million dollar orders for the following resort and spring seasons. They are reading the room, and the runway, for clues. When multiple influential designers showcase strong cutout stories, buyers take note. It validates the trend and reduces their purchasing risk. They know that a coordinated media and influencer push will follow, driving consumer demand. The cutout’s success on the runway provides the justification for buyers to invest heavily in the category. Fast-fashion giants like SHEIN and Zara, who don't attend but monitor trends relentlessly, use this same signal to rapidly design, produce, and market their own versions, democratizing the trend for a mass audience within weeks.
From Runway to Your Shopping Cart
The journey from a Miami runway to a consumer's beach vacation is a carefully managed process. An avant-garde design, perhaps with extreme cutouts and delicate strapping, might appear at a show in July. By November, a slightly more commercial version—easier to wear, more forgiving—appears in resort collections. By the following March, simplified and accessibly priced interpretations have saturated the market, from high-end boutiques to big-box stores. The initial runway look acted as the signal flare. It told the entire supply chain, from textile manufacturers to marketing teams, that this was the aesthetic direction for the year. It informed which colors to produce, what hardware (rings, clasps) to stock, and what kind of models to feature in campaigns. The cutout swimsuit, in all its daring glory, effectively sets the agenda for a significant slice of the multi-billion-dollar global swimwear market.















