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Social media calls out Ralph Lauren for ‘copying’ Met Gala NYC design

Kim Kardashian wasn’t the only one copying a classic look at the Met Gala.

Social media users were pointing fingers at Ralph Lauren, angrily alleging that the designer ripped off the idea of Alicia Keys’ New York skyscraper cape from fellow high-fashion designer Zang Toi.

Toi, the go-to designer favored by the fashionable society set, showed a white couture silk gazar floor-length cape with black hand-beaded New York skyscrapers in February 2020 during his Fall/Winter 2020 runway show at New York Fashion Week — much like Lauren’s design for the 2022 Met Gala.

“My cape was inspired by my love for my adopted home, New York City,” Toi told The Post, noting his inbox has been flooded with fashion lovers pointing out the similarities to his original design. “I came here 41 years ago with $300 to study at Parsons School of Design and I wanted to show my love and appreciation for the city that embraced me — and allowed me to live the American Dream.”

In fact, Toi debuted his black-and-white skyscraper cape many years ago during his Spring 2009 collection — later worn by Ling Tan at the 2010 CFDA Fashion Awards.

“I decided to bring the iconic hand-beaded New York skyline cape out of the archive — timeless beauty never goes out of style — to pay tribute to my favorite city at my 2020 ‘New York, New York’ runway show,” he told The Post, which was attended by former mayor Rudy Giuliani.

Social media is calling out Ralph Lauren for seemingly copying Zang Toi’s design (right) at the Met Gala (left.) FilmMagic
Alicia Keys wore a cape by Ralph Lauren at the Met Gala 2022. Getty Images
Zang Toi featured a design two years before the Met Gala, in 2020 during New York Fashion Week. Lev Radin/Pacific Press/Shutters

Eagle-eyed fashionistas couldn’t help but point out that it seems Lauren may have lifted the idea from the Malaysia-born designer’s “New York, New York” collection, which included a cape with similar NYC embellishments.

“They copied Zang because they know Zang is the most creative unparalleled fashion designer,” one fan said. “I thought it was you and then they said Ralph and I was like WTF,” another commented on the designer’s page.

“I thought that was yours the entire time,” wrote another. “The NERVE,” one Facebook user simply wrote.

“This is a stunning replica of Zang Toi He’s the OG,” an Instagram user said. “The second I saw that cape, I screamed, ‘That’s a knockoff!'” another person said.

Zang Toi also featured a similar design for his Spring 2009 collection show at Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week in 2008. AFP via Getty Images
Zang Toi with Ling Tan at the 2010 CFDA Fashion Awards in NY. Getty Images
The original sketch for designer Zang Toi’s New York City skyline cape. “My cape was inspired by my love for my adopted home, New York City,” Toi told The Post. Courtesy of Zang Toi

Worse of all, some social media users pointed out this wasn’t the first time Lauren seemingly copied fellow New York courtier Toi, who typically dresses A-listers like Sharon Stone, Patti LaBelle and Kimberly Guilfoyle.

“My immediate reaction was ‘Well, there goes Ralph copying Zang again!!!!'” one user wrote, while another chimed in, “It’s not a surprise… he does it all the time.”

The designer, who started his eponymous line in 1989 after wowing Anna Wintour, and who has appeared in the pages of Vogue alongside Lauren, also noted he’s seen his designs imitated before.

“This isn’t the first time,” he simply said.

Toi featured a similar cape during Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week in fall 2015. Getty Images

On the red carpet, Keys told Vogue that she and Lauren were inspired by the Big Apple, since both the “Empire State of Mind” singer and the designer hail from New York.

“My inspiration is our city. New York City forever. We just wanted to bring New York to the gala,” Keys told Vogue, noting she loved the cape’s “artistic vibe.”

The Post has reached out to Lauren for comment.

Lauren, seen here in 2015, did not attend the Met Gala 2022. Mike Coppola

Meanwhile, it’s not the first time Lauren was called a copycat, either. In 1994, Ralph Lauren was ordered to pay $350,000 to fashion house Yves Saint Laurent for copying a tuxedo dress. A sort of impromptu fashion show was held in the courtroom showcasing the YSL design from the 1992 winter couture collection versus Lauren’s dupe seen in a French fashion magazine.

“This is a great victory for creators and design,” YSL president Pierre Bergé said in a statement at the time of the victory. “It’s really important to protect creativity and designers — they should not be ripped off.”