Grocery prices have been on the rise since the beginning of the pandemic. Subsequent factors, including Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, a highly pathogenic bird flu outbreak and President Donald Trump’s tariffs on imported goods, have only intensified price hikes. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, prices have been up 29 percent since February 2020. Grocery prices also rose 0.6% from July 2025 to August, the highest jump in almost three years, according to the Consumer Price Index. As for individual goods, coffee prices increased more than 20% in the past year.
In an effort to save money, several consumers are modifying their spending habits. A February survey conducted by LendingTree found that nearly 90 percent of consumers are changing the way they shop to combat prevailing inflation. Many are stocking up on affordable, non-perishable food items, NPR reported. Others are using more coupons and choosing private-label products, which tend to be cheaper. Some are even skipping meals.
At its core, Smith’s collection is glamorous, albeit unrealistic and ludicrous — much like Smith’s own social media content. Mind you, this is the same influencer who went viral for making a “deconstructed salad,” which is essentially a whole romaine leaf dressed in lemon juice, olive oil, salt and pepper. The romanticization of a single piece of lettuce was certainly not on my bucket list for 2025.
This isn’t the first time Reformation has collaborated with celebrities and digital creators (the brand previously launched collections with Gen Z “It Girl” Devon Lee Carlson and Kacey Musgraves), but it’s certainly its first foray into the world of food fashion. Unlike food fashion collaborations of the past — many of which were merely playful stunts — Ref x Nara is a whole domestic fantasy, tying homemaking to glamour.
Reformation imagines a world where homemaking is sequins and satin. But the grocery aisle tells another story: boxed mac and cheese stacked high, Hamburger Helper flying off shelves. The fantasy is glamorous. However, the reality is anything but.
Maybe this is the natural endpoint of the year’s strangest aesthetic trend: finding beauty in scarcity.