Devil Wears Prada - ONORI Edition
Onori Blog

Devil Wears Prada - ONORI Edition

If The Devil Wears Prada Were Dressed in ONORI

There are films that define fashion moments, and then there are films that become fashion references forever. The Devil Wears Prada is one of them. It shaped how we look at power dressing, ambition, and the unspoken language of style in the workplace.

For this editorial, I reimagined the world of Miranda Priestly, Andy Sachs, and Emily Charlton through the lens of ONORI. Where femininity meets structure, confidence meets softness, and every detail is intentional.

ONORI has always been about more than clothing. It’s about presence. The way a woman enters a room before she even speaks. So naturally, it felt like the perfect world to reinterpret these iconic characters.

Miranda Priestly — Power, Refined

Miranda is not trend-driven. She is timeless authority. In this reinterpretation, she wears sculpted tailoring with clean lines, elevated textures, and precise silhouettes. Think strong shoulders softened by luxury fabrics, commanding, but never loud.

Her presence doesn’t ask for attention; it owns it.

Andy Sachs — Transformation Through Style

Andy’s journey is the most expressive. She evolves, and so does her wardrobe. For her ONORI interpretation, I wanted to reflect that shift: from understated simplicity into confident, intentional femininity.

Soft structure, elevated tailoring, and subtle statement pieces that feel like discovery, not imitation.

Emily Charlton — Controlled Intensity

Emily is ambition in its most structured form. There is discipline in everything she wears, but also a quiet longing beneath it. For her ONORI look, I leaned into elongated silhouettes, sharp detailing, and a sense of restraint that still feels undeniably powerful.

She’s not just working for fashion, she is fashion in motion.

The ONORI Perspective

This editorial is not about recreating costumes. It’s about translating energy.

ONORI sits in that space where strength and elegance coexist. Where women don’t have to choose between softness and structure. Where fashion becomes a reflection of becoming, not just arriving.

Reimagining The Devil Wears Prada through ONORI was a reminder that style is never just about what you wear. It’s about who you are when you wear it.

And sometimes, it’s about who you are becoming.