There is a particular flex in arriving at a wedding looking camera ready without upstaging the couple, and Karlie Kloss knows the line by instinct. At last night’s T & T wedding, her wedding guest hair did exactly what the best beauty styling does in a crowded room, it moved. Not in a sprayed, frozen way, but with a deliberate sweep through the lengths that made every turn of the head feel like a choice.
Karlie Kloss wedding guest hair, built for flash photography

The look, credited to hairstylist Jacob Rozenberg with assistance from Michael Lagarfinkel, sits in that sweet spot between polish and ease: long, brushed out waves with a defined bend through the mid lengths and a softer finish at the ends. In the photos, the shape holds even under direct flash, which is the actual stress test for wedding guest hair once you are off the carpet and into someone’s phone camera.
Makeup was by Soo Park, with styling by Natasha Colvin, a trio of credits that signals this was not a casual night out, but a properly considered beauty moment for a private celebration.
Why this wave works right now
The current cycle of bridal adjacent beauty has swung back toward hair that looks touchable in pictures, not lacquered into submission. What Kloss is wearing here is a modern answer: the wave has definition, but it is not tight. The parting is clean, but not severe. Most importantly, the lengths are styled to keep their silhouette when the dress code shifts from ceremony to dance floor.
If you are collecting references for your own wedding guest hair, note the proportion. The volume lives through the hair’s body, not perched at the crown, and the ends are kept lighter so the movement reads as fluid rather than heavy.
The people behind the look
Rozenberg’s credit is right there in the original caption, and it matters because hair at this level is rarely accidental. When a wave photographs this consistently, it is often down to sectioning discipline and finish choices, brush work, and the practical decision to let the wave relax before it meets a flash.
How to talk to your stylist about this wedding guest hair
Take the photo, but also bring language. Ask for brushed out waves with a defined curve through the mid lengths, and a softer end so the wave does not collapse into frizz as the night goes on. Mention that you want it to survive flash and humidity, and that you would like movement when you walk. That last part is what separates a look that only works in a still image from wedding guest hair that looks alive across a full evening.
As for the T & T wedding itself, the caption keeps the couple’s identities private. The credits, however, tell you everything about the intention: this was a night to dress up properly, and to make the hair count.
Sources: the credited team appears in the original post captions tagging @jacobrozenberg and @sooparkmakeup.
Photo Credits
Images courtesy of their respective owners.









