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Fashion has always been obsessed with the future, but Prada is taking that impulse unusually literally. The Italian house is no longer just imagining space-age silhouettes from Earth. It is helping build the clothing astronauts will actually wear beyond it.
Together with Axiom Space, Prada has unveiled the flight design of the Axiom Extravehicular Mobility Unit, or AxEMU, the spacesuit planned for NASA’s Artemis III lunar mission. The suit was revealed at the International Astronautical Congress in Milan, marking one of the most unexpected collisions yet between luxury fashion and aerospace engineering.
This is not fashion as costume, or a designer logo pasted onto sci-fi fantasy. Prada’s role is rooted in the things the house knows intimately: materials, manufacturing techniques, patterning, protection, and how a body moves inside a constructed shell. Its engineers have worked alongside Axiom’s teams to develop the outer layer of a suit built for one of the harshest environments imaginable: the lunar south pole.
The suit has to do more than look futuristic. It needs to help astronauts survive extreme temperatures, dust, radiation, darkness, and long hours of movement on the Moon’s surface. Axiom says the AxEMU architecture is designed to be scalable, adaptable, and usable not only for lunar missions, but potentially for low-Earth orbit as well.
What makes the collaboration interesting is that it shifts Prada’s language of design into a place where beauty alone is useless. Every seam, layer, closure, and material choice has to answer to function. Luxury becomes less about surface and more about precision. A spacesuit, after all, is the most extreme garment possible: a private atmosphere, a protective skin, a tiny architecture for one human body.
The mission also carries symbolic weight. Artemis III is planned as the first crewed Moon landing since Apollo 17 in 1972, with NASA intending through Artemis to land the first woman and first person of colour on the lunar surface.
For Prada, the project feels like a strange but fitting extension of its identity. The house has always been drawn to intelligence, utility, and slightly cold futurism: nylon, uniforms, industrial surfaces, clothes that make elegance feel engineered rather than ornamental. With Axiom Space, that logic leaves the runway completely.



