- Isabelle Harrison has partnered with REVOLVE to headline a new fashion campaign, modeling a vibrant pink set.
- The deal adds to an already loaded 2026 off-court slate that includes Sephora, Instacart, Jordan Brand, and ONE/SIZE.
- Harrison is in the middle of a milestone season, averaging 12.5 points and 6.0 rebounds for the WNBA's inaugural Toronto Tempo expansion franchise.
Isabelle Harrison is bringing her tunnel-fashion reputation to a new stage, teaming up with online retailer REVOLVE for a campaign that puts her in a bold, vibrant pink set. It’s a natural next step for a player who’s been turning pregame arrivals into style moments for years.
The REVOLVE deal lands during one of the busiest off-court runs of Harrison’s career. In February, she joined a stacked cast for Jordan Brand’s “Generational Greatness” anthem alongside Niecy Nash-Betts and Napheesa Collier.
In June, she fronted Sephora’s “Pretty Badass” platform with Tempo teammates, then popped up in Instacart’s “Arrived” campaign, shot across Toronto landmarks. She also recently partnered with ONE/SIZE on a beauty campaign built around her game-day routine.
None of this momentum is an accident. Harrison signed with FirstPick Management back in March, giving her camp the bandwidth to chase exactly these kinds of deals.
On the court, the 6-foot-5 forward is delivering one of her best seasons yet, anchoring the frontcourt for Toronto under head coach Sandy Brondello during the franchise’s historic first year in the league.
For REVOLVE, Harrison represents a new lane. The brand’s ambassador roster already includes names like Bella Hadid, but this marks REVOLVE’s first known tie-up with a WNBA player, a small but telling step into women’s sports marketing.
Takeaways
REVOLVE picking Harrison isn’t just a one-off styling moment, it’s a fashion retailer testing the waters in women’s sports at a time when WNBA athletes are increasingly driving campaigns for grocery apps, beauty brands, and sneaker giants alike.
For Harrison, it’s another data point in a portfolio that now spans fashion, beauty, grocery delivery, and footwear, exactly the kind of diversified off-court résumé that extends careers and builds long-term brand equity beyond the box score.
Does REVOLVE’s move signal that more fashion retailers will start chasing WNBA talent the way beauty and grocery brands already have? Is Harrison’s longstanding tunnel-fashion reputation doing more for her marketability right now than her on-court numbers?