Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons presented their fall 2026 womenswear collection at Fondazione Prada in Milan, featuring 15 models who walked the runway four times each, progressively removing layers to reveal evolving outfits. The show emphasized the transformative nature of clothing amid constant change. Designers highlighted mutations from within garments, blending distress and luxury.
On February 26, 2026, during Milan Fashion Week, Prada's fall 2026 womenswear show took place at Fondazione Prada, a space designed to evoke a hollowed-out mansion with elegant boiserie, marble fireplaces, and exposed brick construction, underscoring an inside/outside theme.
Fifteen models, including Bella Hadid, presented 60 outfits by walking the runway multiple times, each iteration de-layering to demonstrate how clothing adapts throughout the day. The collection opened with cozy knit sweaters, multi-colored scarves, and tailored coats, transitioning to distressed elements like fraying fabrics, rips, and purposeful soiling. Key looks included a chore coat over a black organza skirt revealing an organza jacket and white printed dress; crinkled trenchcoats peeling to show checkered wool; and a pink satin dress ripped open to expose a black corset-like top. Other details featured exaggerated pink cuffs on shirts, scraps of animal-patterned fabric in black silk dresses, bulky sweaters tucked into sheer skirts, and 1950s-style dresses with plunging zippers.
Accessories contrasted the intentional messiness with luxury: petite bucket and top-handle bags in polished alligator, tall lace-up boots paved in feathers or dangling beaded gewgaws, knee-high socks with floral or crochet patterns paired with pointed pumps and derby shoes, and embellished kitten-heel pumps in ruby red or canary yellow.
In show notes, the designers described "mutations from within, visible to the exterior," with fabrics appearing eaten away to reveal hidden layers. Backstage, Miuccia Prada explained that the layering and un-layering expressed "the continuous necessity of change" and how women navigate it through clothes. Raf Simons added, "It's a lot about the freedom to be inspired and to bring things together that feel contemporary to us," and emphasized working "instinctively" from heart, mind, and respect for history. The show drew front-row attendees like Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan, with crowds cheering for guests Pond Naravit Lertratkosum and Wooyoung.
Elements from the January men's show were reprised, such as tubular dress coats and utility capelets with animal-print fluff, imposing no hierarchy between minimal and opulent or pristine and damaged.