While Radhika Jones, the recently named editor-in-chief of Vanity Fair, doesn’t even start work at the monthly magazine until next month, she has already discovered just how snobby some of her future colleagues can be.

Jones, the former editorial director of the books department at the New York Times and Harvard grad, wore a navy shirtdress and a pair of tights covered with cartoon foxes during a recent meet-and-greet at Condé Nast’s downtown Manhattan offices.

The outfit, to say the least, didn’t impress some staffers. In fact, the fashionistas at Condé Nast were “aghast,” according to a report on Friday.

“The outfit was interesting,” one Condé staffer sniffed later to an industry peer, according to WWD, which recounted the get-together.

The dress, covered in zippers, was said by a staffer outside of Jones’ earshot to be “iffy.”

But perhaps the toughest review of Jones’ outfit came from the devilishly proper Anna Wintour, Condé Nast’s artistic director and editor of Vogue.

Wintour, according to WWD, “is said to have fixed one of her trademark stoic glares upon Jones’ hosiery throughout the duration of the staff meeting.”

One Condé fashion editor told her pals later, “I’m not sure if I should include a new pair of tights in her welcome basket.”

The article sparked a battle royale on the WWD site, with more than 500 people posting comments — most of whom took the Condé Nast staffers to task for their “high school” teasing.

Some comments included photos of cats seemingly ready to fight.

The battle over the shade the Condé staffers threw at Jones also spilled over into the Twitter-sphere, where most ripped into the fashion types high up in their One World Trade Center offices.

“Nobody cares about your 2 PhDs from Columbia. No, you wore Unacceptable Tights to a meeting and that is what we shall discuss because this is apparently real life in 2017,” Briana Morgan tweeted.

Vogue’s director of communications, Zara Rahim, tweeted in defense of her boss: “To say Anna Wintour, who proudly hired Radhika to lead this magazine because of her intellect and vision ‘fixed one of her trademark stoic glares upon Jones’ HOSIERY’ is GARBAGE, and anyone else who knows her KNOWS that.”

Many in the Twitter-sphere speculated that the tights Jones wore were bought at Anthropologie, where similar leggings cost $40.

If Jones did, indeed, buy them from the upscale chain, she must have had them in her dresser for awhile. The chain’s Foxy Tights haven’t been available since 2015.

“We have similar whimsical prints,” a spokeswoman for the store said, pointing to a fish design.

Charlotte Greensit, managing editor of The Intercept, tweeted “catty fashionistas are the worst” and described what she thought were Anthropologie tights as “awesome.”

Perhaps Anthropologie should consider bringing back the design.

If it does, it appears they stand little chance of getting into Vogue’s fashion closet.