‘NAKED” VIDEO ICE SPICE X YEAT
Ice Spice and Yeat’s “Naked” Video Delivers Head-to-Toe Valentino and Archival Yohji Yamamoto Energy
Yeat’s “Naked” video arrives as more than a new rap visual. It feels like a fashion image engineered for the algorithm: surreal, sharply styled, and impossible to separate from the clothing. With Ice Spice commanding the screen in reported head-to-toe Valentino Fall/Winter 2026 and Yeat bringing a darker archive-coded edge, “Naked” lands at the intersection of luxury fashion, rap styling, and internet-era image making.
What gives the video its immediate high-fashion impact is Ice Spice. Her look was reported by Complex as all Valentino FW26, a styling choice that instantly lifts the visual out of standard music-video territory and into something closer to a campaign image. Against the clean, surreal set, the Valentino reads with even more force: polished, dominant, and unapologetically glamorous.
Yeat, meanwhile, pushes the visual in the opposite direction. His styling reads colder, rarer, and more archival. If you’re calling out the Yohji Yamamoto Pour Homme Pin Up Girl Shirt 2001, it works as a killer contrast to Ice Spice’s runway polish: rebellious, cerebral, and steeped in fashion history. I could verify that this exact Yohji piece exists in resale/archive listings, but I could not find a reliable published source confirming that the shirt in the video is definitively that exact item, so that detail is best presented as a fashion identification or style attribution rather than a confirmed credit.
That tension is exactly why the Ice Spice and Yeat “Naked” video works so well visually. Ice Spice gives the frame luxury clarity. Yeat gives it distortion. One side is modern runway authority; the other is underground archive obsession. Together, they create a fashion narrative instead of just wearing clothes on camera.
The bigger story here is how “Naked” understands the current relationship between music and style. The video, released after Yeat’s new double album ADL, was directed by Yeat under his birth name, Noah Olivier Smith, which makes the visual feel even more intentional. This is not just a song rollout. It is world-building through silhouette, contrast, and visual restraint.
For COUTEUR, that is what makes the Yeat and Ice Spice “Naked” video worth covering. The strongest music visuals right now do not rely on chaos alone. They rely on precision. Here, that means a reported head-to-toe Valentino moment on Ice Spice and a Yeat look that channels the kind of Yohji Yamamoto archive energy fashion people immediately clock. The result is a rap video that plays like a luxury editorial with a warped edge.
“Naked” succeeds because it gives both artists a distinct visual language. Ice Spice appears sleek, sculpted, and hyper-visible. Yeat looks like he stepped out of a darker, more collectible menswear universe. That contrast creates a memorable image economy around the release, and in 2026, that matters just as much as the music itself.
