Anne Hathaway has officially started filming The Devil Wears Prada 2, and while the release date may be miles away (mark your calendars for 1 May 2026, the Friday before the Met Gala), the fashion is already delivering—because the original costume designer Patricia Field has returned too.
The film is officially back in production with Anne Hathaway returning as Andy Sachs, Meryl Streep as Miranda Priestly, Emily Blunt as Emily Charlton, and Stanley Tucci as Nigel Kipling—which already feels like the reunion of the decade.
But while the plot remains under wraps, it’s the wardrobe that’s generating the most buzz. Anne gave fans a taste of what’s to come by sharing one of her first looks from set: a vintage pinstriped Jean-Paul Gaultier waistcoat and trousers, styled with a Jemma Wynne Forme emerald-cut diamond toggle necklace. Andy Sachs has clearly come a long way from clunky cerulean sweaters—this is power dressing with real editorial bite.

Another day, another look—this one more off-duty, but still label-heavy with a Toteme tank, Agolde denim maxi skirt, Chanel sandals, and Bvlgari sunnies that mean business. Even when she’s casual, she’s curating.

Then she switched gears completely, quite literally, channeling an F1 mechanic in a Re/Done x Ford denim boiler suit. Same Chanel sandals, the new Valentino Garavani Panthea bag, Celine cat-eye sunglasses, and serious street style energy.


And then there’s the Hamptons moment. Anne wore a Gabriela Hearst Niki patchwork maxi dress from the Spring 2025 collection that was vibrant, joyful, and full of personality. The look was layered with a Marlo Laz Squash Blossom bead choker, another hit of Jemma Wynne sparkle, a Fendi Basket Forty8 bag casually slung over her Brics Bellagio trunk. It’s the kind of look that makes you want to plan a spontaneous weekend escape—just for the excuse to wear a dress that breezy to board the Jitney.
By the time the film hits cinemas, we’ll have a full breakdown of every designer moment, every bag switch, and every boot-on-curb street style serve. From boiler suits to boardroom glamour—Andy Sachs 2.0 is already looking like she’s worth the wait.

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