Trend Report

Winter’s Embellishment Trend Is the Easiest Way to Enchant Your Daily Wardrobe


More is more—especially when it comes to crystals, rhinestones, and sequins.
embellishment trend  MILAN ITALY  SEPTEMBER 24 Leonie Hanne wears a grey plaid embellished coord set with crystal...
Raimonda Kulikauskiene/Getty Images

This winter has made it crystal clear that embellishment is no longer simply an accent; it’s an attitude. Appliqués are ascendant. Sequins have gone high-octane. Rococo shine and opulent baubles are leaping from the runways into real life. And seemingly every style, from Sabrina Carpenter-esque miniskirts to faux-fur coats, is resplendent in sparkle.

Like many trends, it all started on the catwalk. Dries Van Noten and Courrèges sent out paillettes and sequin sets like wearable stardust for fall-winter 2025, styled as both eveningwear and everyday pieces. Sachin & Babi showed silk column dresses with tonal floral flourishes of beading and embroidery. Dolce & Gabbana’s collection featured a pack of glamazon models in fringed flapper dresses and glittering outerwear. For its part, Prada’s spring-summer 2026 runway featured dresses with crystalline necklines, only reinforcing the trend’s staying power.

Glamour’s embellishment trend wish list

The Sleek Sweater
Zara Jewel Bead Knit Jumper
Read more
The Event Pants
Kate Spade Embellished Wool Pants
Read more
The Flapper Dress
Abercrombie & Fitch V-Neck Beaded Minidress
Read more
The Viral Bag
Coach Tabby Shoulder Bag
Read more
The DIY Set
Free People Petite Pin Set
Read more

“I love that embellishment feels slightly rebellious right now,” says Sarah Clary, a stylist and cofounder of the media brand I’m Not Dead. “Once relegated to holiday parties and New Year’s Eve, high-shine touches are suddenly everywhere, from crystal-encrusted collars to scatters of beading on winter dresses—as at home with winter layers as they are under a disco ball. “It’s not precious or ‘saving it for a wedding’ energy. It’s a pearl on a sweatshirt, sequins at noon, something sparkly while doing deeply unglamorous things. I like that it gives permission to be decorative without an occasion—or a personality overhaul.”

Some of Clary’s favorite designer inspirations and style legends for embellishment skew more thinking-woman magpie than glitter bomb: “I always come back to Prada and early Miu Miu—when embellishment felt intellectual and a little off, not sugary. Icon-wise, I think about women like Lee Radziwill, Tina Chow, or even Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy on the rare moments she allowed a detail to do the talking. It’s less about sparkle and more about confidence—letting one thing be enough and resisting the urge to explain it.”