Prada Fall 2026 Collection
At Prada, disorder was deliberate. For Fall 2026, Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons delivered a rigorous meditation on layering—both literal and conceptual—where garments were stripped back, built up, and reconfigured in motion.






Fifteen models marched through the vast, carpeted set at a punishing pace, returning repeatedly as layers were added or removed. A flared skirt revealed itself as a ’50s-inflected dress; beneath a severe black pantsuit hid cotton briefs and a gray crewneck. Each pass exposed another construction, another intention. Clothes were not static—they evolved.
The collection embraced abrasion. Fabrics were frayed, distressed, purposefully soiled. Wrinkled shirts with exaggerated French cuffs dangled from the wrist. Crumpled trench coats split at the seams to expose plaid wool linings. Tubular overcoats—echoing the men’s Fall show—reappeared, alongside glossy utilitarian capes trimmed with vertical strips of animal-patterned fuzz. Corroded black wool on skirts and sheath dresses dissolved into blurred florals, a tension between decay and delicacy.






Against this studied imperfection came flashes of refinement: polished crocodile top-handle and bucket bags, towering lace-up boots edged in beads or engulfed in feathers. Luxury, here, was not erased but reframed.



Set inside a space resembling a hollowed-out mansion—ornate moldings, marble fireplaces, colonial windows—the show underscored the theme of accumulation. Historical fragments, furniture, paintings: culture itself as layering. Prada described the process as an expression of “the constant need for change,” and how women negotiate that flux through dress. Simons rejected any hierarchy between minimal and opulent, pristine and distressed.

