Miu Miu celebrates women’s work in this collection | Miu Miu Spring 2026 – Paris Fashion Week

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by brownfashionagal

Is Miu Miu dead? This collection is the answer—absolutely not. It might not have been the most desirable lineup at first glance, but it was intelligent, layered, and thought-provoking. Miuccia Prada leaned into that signature Prada ‘ugly pretty’ aesthetic with full intent, using it to question what we value in life.

The show, staged like a factory canteen with Formica tables and the faint smell of cleaning fluid, was built around one humble symbol:the apron. It showed up in almost every look, reworked in unexpected ways—leather aprons with ruffled bibs, floral ones tied over crisp shirting, crystal-studded versions worn with knit skirts, and even lace aprons layered over bikinis. The silhouettes had that familiar Miu Miu awkwardness with boxy, slightly offbeat structure Skirts were shorter, jackets oversized, and proportions clashed just enough to keep things interesting.

Prada called it her favorite garment, a piece that captures ‘the real difficult life of women’ from domestic workers to factory laborers. There was something deeply human about it all. The clothes celebrated labor, both seen and unseen, the kind that often goes unnoticed but keeps the world turning.

Styling-wise, it was chaotic in an interesting way; sometimes awkward, always deliberate. A more defined color palette might have tied things together, but maybe that wasn’t the point. This wasn’t a sweet or easy collection, and it wasn’t meant to be. It was meant to divide, to make us think.

This wasn’t a sweet, cute Miu Miu collection. It wasn’t trying to be.

Pictures courtesy of Vogue Runway

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We do not own the rights to any of these images and they have been used in good faith. Every effort has been made to ensure that all images are used with proper credits. If you are the rightful owner of any image used on our site and wish to have it removed, please contact us at ayerhsmagazine@gmail.com and we will promptly remove it. We are a non-commercial, passion-driven, independent fashion blog and do not intend to infringe any copyright. Thank you for your understanding.