Last week we looked at some of the eighteenth century lace from the Marie Antoinette exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, but this week we’ll see some examples from the exhibition of how modern fashion designers have been inspired by her style to use lace in their creations. Some of these gowns were made for actresses portraying her in films and others were designed for the catwalk.
The Christian
Dior gown at the top of this post was made for the actor Emilia Schule who
played the title role in Banijay’s series Marie Antoinette in 2023. The image
here shows details of the silk layers trimmed with machine-made lace.
This wedding
dress was designed by the Vivienne Westwood fashion house in 2025. It includes
a paniered skirt and train made of machine-made, Chantilly-style lace, combined
with a stiff, lace-covered bodice, none of which would have looked out of place
in eighteenth century France. However, where a period gown would have a full
skirt, this one instead has a gathered mini skirt revealing the model’s legs.
It also features a lovely veil made of fine net, edged with the same lace as
the gown.
This gown, designed
by Alessandro Michele for Valentino in 2025, also has a paniered silhouette and
train and incorporates layers of floral lace. It was inspired by Marie
Antoinette’s private hideaway, the Petit Trianon, and reflects the idea of an idealised
countryside lifestyle with shepherdesses in the fields.
This older
design inspired by Marie Antoinette was made in about 1923 by the Boué Soeurs.
They were known for their ‘lingerie dresses’ and their advertisements featured
models as shepherdesses. These references to the Petit Trianon, relaxation and
idyllic countryside reflect the life of Marie Antoinette and the scandal she
caused when she was painted in a simple muslin dress, which the public considered
to be nothing more than underwear. This lingerie dress features paniers under a lace and silk
chiffon skirt, embellished with dainty ribbon roses reflecting the bucolic theme
and the fashion house, which incorporated a rose on its labels.
These dresses
aren’t actual lace, but I couldn’t resist including them. The one thing
everyone thinks they know about Marie Antoinette is that she uncaringly said ‘Let
them eat cake’ when she heard that French peasants were starving. However there
is no evidence she said anything of the sort and the story did not appear until
50 years after her death, so it does seem unlikely. However, these silicone dresses designed
by Jeremy Scott for Moschino in 2020-2021 are lace-like and great fun and reflect
the fantasy and excess of what has become known as the Marie Antoinette style.

















