


This just might be the breast fashion trend yet.
Businesswomen who aren’t quite ready to swap out their swimsuits for turtlenecks as we enter into the chilly season are going shirtless — rebelliously rocking bikini tops as business causal couture.
“I don’t know if bikinis and blazers are a thing, but they are now,” professed holistic health specialist Kelsey Hoogstad, from Fort Worth, Texas, in TikTok footage of herself in a black and white bandeau bikini top paired with a hot pink blazer and tribal-print bottoms.
“This is going to be how I show up for work from now on,” continued the blond of the funky fashion fad inspired by Hollywood’s hottest.
Jennifer Aniston, 54, wowed in a tiny black bikini beneath a white Valentino cropped blazer for the cover of CR Fashion Book’s forthcoming “Muses” issue — its 10th-anniversary edition — out Oct. 3.
The “Friends” gem accessorized the avant-garde garb with a pair of black slacks and a thin, waist-length black tie, giving the look some in-office panache.
Aniston’s fellow A-listers such as Hailey Bieber, 26, Emily Ratajkowski, 32, and Irina Shayk, 37, have also turned heads in the topsy-turvy wear, inspiring fashionista online to join in on the summer-meets-fall fun.
“Everyone on TikTok is wearing bathing tops with blazers all of the sudden,” said self-proclaimed “Y2K outfits” lover Diana Triesit in a video post dedicated to the wild style.
“Let’s try it out!” she said to her virtual audience before slipping into a burnt-orange bikini paired with crème colored trousers and a nude blazer.
Fans applauded the splashy look.
“I love it,” raved a bikini buff.
“I’d wear it to brunch,” said another.
“I wear it in the office,” a separately modish daredevil said.
Jamie Schuppert, a coastal home-goods content creator from Santa Monica, California, also stunned her social media supporters with the seaside chicness, posing in a black crisscross bikini top and a navy-green linen set.
The blond titled her outfit “business casual, but make it summer.”
And, believe it or not, bikinis are not the most bizarre pieces that bold 9-to-5ers are wearing in the workplace.
Haute, on-the-clock Gen Z hedonists sent tongues wagging by sporting skimpy night club outfits to their corporate posts in fall 2022. That year, teachers with a passion for skin-tight fashions were, too, taken to task for donning barely-there looks in the classroom.
“What teachers are wearing should not be the focus,” an elementary school educator known for cloaking her curves in clinging frocks previously told The Post. “The focus should be on the kids.”
And when it comes to beachwear wannabes who’d like to throw on sexy swimwear to a high-powered meeting — but aren’t ready to shock the bosses in a bikini top — creative fashion plates have come up with a clever way to push the envelope.
“When your sustainable swimsuit is this stunning, you have to wear it as workwear as well,” said a thrift-shopping influencer known as Hudi regarding an olive green one-piece bathing suit with spaghetti straps and a plunging neckline.
“Flip it upside down so that [the] crotch [of the swimsuit] is on your shoulder,” advised the brunette, who completed the fit with nude pants, an oversized, striped, button-up shirt, a brown leather jacket and white platform boots.
Renee Nikole, a New York-based tastemaker, dreamed up a similar ensemble, matching a black and white, one-shoulder monokini with a pair of distressed jeans and a light-weight embellished robe.
“A bathing suit is basically a waterproof bodysuit,” said the trendsetter in a TikTok clip. “Wearing your beachwear with regular clothing items is an easy way to stretch your wardrobe.”