Charli D’Amelio has landed the cover of Remix Magazine’s Creative Generation Issue, with the full feature dropping next week.
Remix Magazine shared the announcement on Instagram, describing D’Amelio as “the most followed woman on TikTok.” The reveal included a full credits list. The complete issue will contain the shoot, a feature story, and an interview by Tessa Patrick.
For the shoot, D’Amelio wears Messika jewelry and Prada. That combination shows up on red carpets far more than it does on social media. It says a lot about where D’Amelio is being positioned right now. Photographer Dennis Leupold handled the images, with styling by Carlee Sue, hair by Hayley Heckmann, and makeup by Liv Adorma. Creative producer Steven Fernandez, contributing fashion director Amber Rebecca, and social director Bethie Petts also worked on the project.
Fashion and influencer culture haven’t always overlapped cleanly. Print magazine covers, Prada fittings, fine jewelry from Paris – that was one world. TikTok stars were another. That line has mostly disappeared, and D’Amelio is one of the bigger reasons why.
The production level behind this shoot reflects that shift. Prada has been intentional about its public partnerships. Messika is a Paris fine jewelry house that shows up consistently at major award shows and fashion events. Neither is a casual choice for a shoot credit. When both appear together on a cover, you’re looking at something with real fashion weight behind it.
D’Amelio’s path to a cover like this is worth knowing. She first went viral on TikTok in 2019, doing dance videos from her bedroom in Connecticut. She moved fast. She became the first creator ever to reach 50 million followers on TikTok and has held the title of most followed woman on the platform ever since. She’s 22 now.
Along the way, she’s built a solid resume. A Hulu reality series with her family. Ongoing brand partnerships across fashion and beauty. A growing editorial presence that’s been building toward moments like this one. The Remix Magazine cover feels like the natural next step.
The “Creative Generation” framing fits well. She didn’t just go viral and stay put. She moved across entertainment, fashion, and media deliberately. Building that audience took short-form videos and a whole lot of consistency. That’s a real arc.
The Tessa Patrick interview is what could make this issue genuinely worth reading. D’Amelio has been candid in past conversations about growing up famous. She’s talked about the mental health toll of a massive public profile and figuring out who she is beyond a follower count. Those conversations have resonated broadly. The full issue lands next week.
