Since her marriage to Kanye West in January 2023, Bianca Censori has undergone a dramatic transformation in both her appearance and sartorial choices. Formerly known for her long brunette hair and more modest wardrobe, the Australian designer now embraces a daring new look: a bold blonde pixie cut paired with sultry outerwear crafted from sheer, whisper-thin fabrics in monochromatic neutrals – or, at times, nothing at all.
With a background that includes a Master of Architecture from the University of Melbourne, attained in 2020, Bianca's pre-Ye life remains largely under wraps. Bianca is an architectural designer at Kanye's brand Yeezy, she joined the company in November 2020. She started a jewellery company called Nylons after high school, and carried on the business during her studies.
"I was born and raised in Melbourne, Australia," she previously told Hypebeast. "As a child I was consistently drawn to creative endeavours, mostly artistic. I always wanted to be a sculptor and to me, architecture is the union of art and pragmatics. It is the grandest artistic gesture that we can place onto the earth. I was drawn to it, purely, as a shift in artistic scale."
Prior to her relationship with Kanye, Bianca’s style leant towards glamorous evening wear – think statement dresses, heavy contour, and sleek long dark hair. However, following her marriage, she shifted towards a wardrobe defined by sheer fabrics and a neutral color palette, indicative of the Yeezy aesthetic.
Nowadays, Bianca is often seen in sheer tights, bra tops, and other Yeezy staples, rarely straying from the brand's preferred shades of black, gray, and cream. Her wardrobe includes an array of second-skin bodysuits, which she styles with see-through leotards and tights.
Her fashion choices haven't come without their fair share of controversy. In response to her barely-there ensembles, she told Vanity Fair: "That, to me, is basically not nudity."
"I had an obvious obsession with nudity. I was naked everywhere. I didn’t detach with it at any point. I consistently showed the same imagery over and over and over again. "I live my artwork," she added.












