Early Steps in the Digital Underground
Some people enter fashion through family connections. Others arrive with a diploma from the right design school. Chris Lavish came in by living slightly ahead of everyone else. Just far enough forward that it feels intentional, even if it rarely is.
Before the invitations and front-row seats, Lavish was already navigating the early internet like it was an undiscovered city worth exploring. He was on MySpace when it was still raw, on Tumblr when it was still underground. For him, these platforms were not novelties. They were territories to claim and proof of presence. He knew where to stand before the crowd showed up, not to network or “build a brand,” but to be there when something first started to buzz.
Finding the Unmarked Door
Lavish never waits for permission. He has a way of finding the side entrance, the hidden staircase, and the hallway nobody notices until it is too late. His timing is part instinct and part calculated risk. In the digital world, it is the equivalent of slipping past the velvet rope before anyone realizes it has been unhooked.
A Matcha Moment That Went Viral
In 2018, a photographer captured him on a Manhattan street, matcha in hand. It was not staged. It was not styled. It was just an ordinary Tuesday. At the time, matcha was a quiet ritual found more in small cafés than on Instagram feeds. Months later, it was everywhere. The photo landed in The Cut, and from there, became part of the fashion internet’s bloodstream. This is his pattern. Lavish often stands exactly where the next wave will crash long before anyone else senses the tide turning.
From Contributor to Shaper
From his early contributions to Fashion Week Online to eventually shaping its editorial voice, his journey has never been about climbing step by step. It has been about arriving in the right place at the right moment, again and again, early enough for it to feel like destiny.
Making Presence a Strategy
Fashion cycles through trends every season, but true access moves slower. It belongs to those who can enter the room before it becomes important. Lavish does not just witness what is coming. He makes it feel inevitable simply by being there first. In the art world, they call this presence. Not the kind that is handed to you, but the kind you claim for yourself.
- Editorial Credits
Stylist — Samia Laaboudi (The SL Story)
Influence/Model — Chris Lavish (@nyclavish)
Footwear — Vans

