Truman Capote Had His Swans—Now Christopher John Rogers Has His Squirrels


They’re hard to miss in their Crayola-colored ballgowns, gold lamé barn jackets, and neon suits printed in candy stripes.

“They” are the “squirrels” of Christopher John Rogers, the Brooklyn-based designer whose high-spirited clothes you’ll recognize on Gigi Hadid and Zendaya and from the 2024 J.Crew collaboration that inspires grown adults to dress up in sequins and satin. According to friends of the brand, Christopher has bestowed the term of endearment to all fans of his work.

The squirrel club is not exclusive. You can have a stacked collection of CJR or own just one standalone piece to gain admission. The one other requirement is an appreciation for the exuberant world Rogers is building. Just as Truman Capote’s Swans fed the writer’s creativity, the designer sees his squirrels as muses—living, breathing manifestations of the CJR girl. He keeps a digital archive of his “Squirrels” on Instagram, dating back to his brand’s burgeoning days in 2019—around the time when Michelle Obama commissioned a sparkly cyan suit from Rogers and helped catapult him from a name to know in the New York scene to one of the most coveted craftsmen in the industry.

Designer Christopher John Rogers in a white outfit walking the street at New York Fashion week two women in a white button down, green skirt, colorful striped sweater, brown pants, and a cookie bag

Rogers (left) with two colorfully-clad squirrels.

(Image credit: Tyler Joe)

Why the word ‘squirrels’? No one knows—even Rogers’s furry friends don’t know their etymology. “It’s always on Chris’s lips, and I’ve actually never asked him why ‘squirrels,’ but it just made sense, so we all just went with it,” Pam Nasr, a film director and close friend of Rogers, says over the phone. “It’s kooky, bright, positive. Even the way it sounds—the squirrels is coincidentally a close sub-in to the girls.” And for Drag Race fans, the term calls on the same wink-wink, nudge-nudge familiarity of RuPaul’s “squirrel friends.”

Plus, as culture has shown, a community works most effectively when it has a name to organize under; Beyoncé has her Beyhive, Nicki Minaj has her Barbz, and Taylor Swift has her Swifties.

Keke Palmer is seen at

Keke Palmer in a crisp lime green suit made by Rogers.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

CJR’s squirrels are eager to gather as a group again for the showing of his Resort 2025 collection at New York Fashion Week during the Fall 2025 show circuit. Chloe King, a fashion veteran and friend of the brand, sees the “squirrel-verse” as a sacred space. “In the studio and after parties alongside former [fashion school] classmates, colleagues, or show seatmates—we find common ground as fans and dreamers. His collaborators and friends are warm, curious, and authentic—a rare combination of qualities in the industry and a direct reflection of who Chris is,” she says.

For King, the squirrels harken back to a bygone era when guests didn’t show up to a runway show to see or be seen—all that mattered was the glamour. “I imagine legends like Diana Vreeland and Andre Leon Talley would have loved [a CJR show],” she says.

Chloe King at New York Fashion Week in a Christopher John Rogers orange and yellow polka dot skirt, a blue top, blue hat, and white heels

King at NYFW in a blood orange and lemon cyber-dotted ball skirt.

(Image credit: Future/Tyler Joe)





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