Bottega Veneta by Louise Trotter Sets Spring Trends & Beats Expectations

models at the bottega veneta show wearing the spring 2026 collection by louise trotter

Bottega Veneta‘s Spring 2026 show at Milan Fashion Week was guaranteed to make history long before Louise Trotter took her final bow. The September 26 outing was her formal debut as creative director—the start of the Italian label’s long-awaited era with a woman designer at the helm. It’s a rarity in the label’s 60-year history and in fashion overall. While this season is full of designer debuts, Trotter and Proenza Schouler’s Rachel Scott are the only two who aren’t men. (Yes, really.)

Not even a Devil Wears Prada stunt at Dolce & Gabbana earlier on Saturday could turn the focus away from Bottega Veneta’s show later that evening. The stakes were too high; the pressure was too intense. With so few women leaders in fashion, editors, insiders, and celebrity front row guests like Julianne Moore wanted to see Trotter’s premiere offering succeed. Eva Chen, Instagram Head of Fashion Partnerships, told her 1.7 million followers she only traveled to Milan Fashion Week this season to support Trotter’s first collection.

A few looks into the show, it was clear: Louise Trotter’s Bottega Veneta was worth the journey. Her collection managed to do what a business ultimately needs to do—set a spring trend agenda and introduce It items—while offering her singular twist on Bottega’s heritage of artistry and craft.

Louise Trotter taking her bow at Bottega Veneta, a red mule sandal from the runway tucked into the crook of her arm.

(Image credit: Launchmetrics)

Let’s start with what the casual shopper wants to know: Louise Trotter’s Bottega Veneta is still very much a destination for spring handbag trends. The show invitation, a block of leather that stretched into a latticed leather book tote, was proof enough.



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