The most-talked-about faces of the Spring 2027 shows were not teenagers discovered on Instagram. They were women in their forties, fifties, and beyond — seasoned models whose careers once peaked in the 1990s and early 2000s, now enjoying a second act that shows no signs of slowing.
What has shifted this season is the quantity and the intent. Where previous seasons treated an older model as a single token gesture — one silver-haired woman in a show of twenty — the Spring 2027 casts multiple experienced models per collection. It has become a critical mass rather than a novelty.
The industry’s relationship with age remains complicated. While older women are increasingly celebrated on the runway, they remain largely absent from advertising campaigns and e-commerce imagery, where retouching erases the very qualities that make their runway appearances compelling. The progress is real but incomplete.
The message from this fashion month is unmistakable: the industry is slowly learning that beauty does not expire at forty, and that a face with lived experience carries a depth that youth, however luminous, cannot replicate.
At Prada, Amber Valletta closed the show in a tailored black coat, her silver hair catching the light as she turned. At Celine, Michael Rider cast Carolyn Murphy — now fifty-one — as the face of his debut collection, a role typically reserved for women half her age. At Fendi, Kristen McMenamy brought her signature theatricality to a floor-length gown in burgundy cady.


