Heidi Klum brought a modern edge to Oktoberfest dressing this weekend, lacing into Celine sneakers for the annual Wiesn opening in Munich.
Tom Kaulitz and Heidi Klum during the 2025 Oktoberfest opening at Käfer Wiesn-Schänke Theresienwiese on Saturday in Munich, Germany.
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The model opted for the house’s Alan sneaker in optic white canvas, a low-top silhouette detailed with Celine’s Triomphe emblem at the side and embossed branding across the sole. The pared-back pair featured cotton laces, a tonal rubber outsole and round-toe construction, giving the sneaker a streamlined finish. At $820, the Alan has emerged as one of Celine’s sharpest entries in the white sneaker market — a category that continues to blur the line between everyday ease and quiet luxury.
A closer look at Heidi Klum’s Celine Alan Sneakers in optic white.
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Klum slipped the sneakers under a cream satin dirndl with puffed sleeves and a cinchedwaist, finishing the look with a crown of white blossoms. The mix put her in step with Bavarian tradition, even as the sneakers kept the outfit firmly in her more casual-cool wheelhouse. Her husband, rocker Tom Kaulitz, leaned classic in embroidered suede lederhosen, knee socks and lace-ups.
Celine Alan Sneakers with Triomphe in canvas in optic white ($820)
Celine
The choice marked a notable pivot from Klum’s footwear earlier this week at her own HeidiFest celebration, where she embraced a heel-first approach in candy-red pumps and frilled socks. At Oktoberfest proper, the sneakers offered a softer, more pragmatic take — one that kept her moving through the festival crowds without sacrificing brand cachet.
Luxury sneakers have increasingly surfaced in similar contexts across celebrity wardrobes. Just this weekend, GloRilla took Louis Vuitton’s Time Out sneakers to the iHeartRadio Music Festival stage in Las Vegas, while Amanda Seyfried opted for sustainable white sneakers from Cariuma at the Venice Film Festival in August.
The Alan sits within Slimane’s broader sneaker push at Celine, which often lifts from the house’s archives. Its side Triomphe emblem — first introduced in the 1970s — gives the streamlined shape a discreet brand signature.