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Sunday Rose Calls Nicole Kidman’s Closet “My Favorite Store”

Nicole Kidman’s 17-year-old daughter opens up about raiding her mom’s legendary wardrobe—and the family fashion chaos that comes with it.

Los Angeles, August 6 EST: If you’ve ever borrowed something from your mother’s closet an oversized flannel, a too-fancy clutch, a perfume spritz that lingered all day you already know where Sunday Rose Kidman Urban is coming from.

Only difference? Her mom is Nicole Kidman.

In a just-published Nylon interview, the 17-year-old daughter of Kidman and Keith Urban let it slip (with a grin, we can only imagine): “I take everything. It’s my favorite store.” She was talking, of course, about raiding her mother’s closet. Not metaphorically literally.

And who could blame her? Nicole Kidman’s wardrobe isn’t just a closet; it’s an archive. We’re talking decades of Oscar gowns, fashion week one-offs, whispered-in-your-ear Couture. The kind of pieces that have seen more flashbulbs than a Times Square billboard. For Sunday Rose, it’s less ‘what should I wear’ and more ‘what era shall I borrow today?’

High Fashion, Low-Key Chaos

As it turns out, Sunday’s closet raids are the stuff of family legend. Kidman, in multiple interviews over the past year, has described the ritual in a tone every mom of teenage girls will understand: fond amusement mixed with a healthy dose of helpless surrender.

“They go crazy,” she told Entertainment Tonight, describing how Sunday and younger sister Faith Margaret descend upon her wardrobe like a pack of fashion-forward raccoons. “It looks like a bomb’s hit it,” she said. “And then they just take a T-shirt!”

There’s something charming about that image: the Oscar winner stepping over stilettos, smoothing out wrinkled Dior, watching her daughters run off with the simplest thing in the room. A white tee that fits just right. The kind of piece you only find by accident like most of life’s good stuff.

Borrowed Threads, Worn Stories

To her credit, Kidman takes it all in stride. She even joked to InStyle that the borrowing only goes one direction. “They can take from me,” she said. “But I’m not allowed to take from them.”

Cue every mother ever raising an eyebrow from behind the laundry pile.

Still, you get the sense Kidman isn’t too bothered. Maybe even a little proud. After all, fashion has always been more than red carpet moments for her it’s memory, rebellion, identity. If her daughters want to connect with that one Balenciaga jacket or threadbare tee at a time so be it.

And for Sunday, those pieces probably feel like more than hand-me-downs. They’re soft-spoken souvenirs from a version of her mom the world knew before she was born.

From The Archive to Everyday Life

It’s easy to forget, sometimes, that kids like Sunday Rose live in a parallel world. One where vintage means a Tom Ford-era Gucci slip, and hand-me-downs might’ve been custom-fitted by Armani Privé. But at the core of it, it’s still a teenager digging through her mom’s stuff, searching for something that feels right something that feels like her.

That’s the magic of clothes, right? They let us experiment. Step into another skin. Try on courage, flirt with nostalgia. When Sunday tosses on one of Kidman’s old T-shirts, maybe she’s not just borrowing fabric. Maybe she’s borrowing a little fearlessness.

Not Just Playing Dress-Up

While Sunday has largely stayed out of the spotlight, there have been hints lately that she’s finding her own voice and style. Fans recently noticed she’d dyed her hair a striking auburn, a quiet echo of her mom’s flame-haired heyday. Maybe it’s homage. Maybe it’s a soft “I’m here” from someone who’s grown up surrounded by cameras, but never chased them.

There’s no modeling contract yet. No debutante Instagram moment. But if fashion is a language, Sunday is clearly fluent. And if you’ve ever stood in front of your mom’s mirror, twirling in something borrowed, you know exactly how that feels.


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Korean-American minimalist living in Hoboken, Ren blends aesthetic writing with deep dives into wellness, home design, urban routines, and the pursuit of the good life. Think Monocle meets MindBodyGreen.
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Korean-American minimalist living in Hoboken, Ren blends aesthetic writing with deep dives into wellness, home design, urban routines, and the pursuit of the good life. Think Monocle meets MindBodyGreen.

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PEOPLEInStyle Page Six

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