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Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Is Emily in Paris the Greatest Fashion Show on Television? Season 5 Makes a Serious Case

There has always been a debate around Emily in Paris. Is it escapism, satire, or a full-blown fashion fantasy? With the release of season 5, the answer feels clearer than ever. This is no longer just a stylish show. It may be the most consistently elevated fashion television showcase the industry has ever produced.

(Image credit: Giulia Parmigiani/Courtesy of Netflix)

Season 5 takes Emily Cooper, played by Lily Collins, beyond Paris and into Italy, unfolding across Rome and Venice while still anchoring itself in the French capital. The shift in geography sparks a major evolution in wardrobe, and it works. What might feel excessive in Paris suddenly feels right at home in Italy, where drama, glamour, and visual storytelling are woven into everyday life.

What makes this season especially compelling is that there is not a single character who feels underdressed or misstyled. Every look feels intentional. Every outfit contributes to character development. The fashion does not compete with the story; it is the story.

(Image credit: Giulia Parmigiani/Courtesy of Netflix)

Italy Changes the Rules, and Emily Rises to the Occasion

Emily’s wardrobe has always been bold, but season 5 allows her to fully lean into spectacle. According to costume designer Marylin Fitoussi, Italian fashion culture embraces being overdressed. Glitter, feathers, graphic silhouettes, nothing is off limits. That philosophy reshapes Emily’s look the moment she steps onto Italian soil.

(Image credit: Caroline Dubois/Courtesy of Netflix)

Rome brings brighter colors, sharper contrasts, and more expressive silhouettes. Venice softens the palette with beiges, light greens, and romantic textures. Paris, by comparison, becomes more restrained and monochromatic. This deliberate contrast makes the fashion feel cinematic and thoughtful rather than chaotic.

Fitoussi also draws inspiration from classic Italian cinema, especially black and white films from the 1950s. Polka dots become a recurring motif, referencing icons like Claudia Cardinale, Sophia Loren, and Anna Magnani. These influences show up in feminine, flattering shapes that feel timeless yet modern.

(Image credit: Giulia Parmigiani/Courtesy of Netflix)

One standout Roman look pairs a white polka dot Moschino blouse and trousers with AGL shoes, an Alameda Turquesa bag, and Carolina Herrera sunglasses. It is playful, polished, and unmistakably Italian through an Emily in Paris lens.

Another highlight arrives in episode eight, where Emily wears a navy wool Barbara Bui jacket with matching culotte shorts, layered over an Essentiel Antwerp blouse and finished with Valentino shoes and a Pierre Hardy bag. The silhouette is powerful, oversized, and confident. Less romantic, more commanding. She does not enter the room quietly; she owns it.

Mindy and Sylvie Match Emily Beat for Beat

What truly sets season 5 apart is that Emily is no longer carrying the fashion narrative alone.

(Image credit: Courtesy of Netflix)

Mindy Chen, played by Ashley Park, opens the season with a head-to-toe lime green airport look so bold it reportedly stopped conversations on set. It is theatrical, joyful, and fearless, exactly what Mindy represents as her career and confidence continue to grow.

Sylvie Grateau, portrayed by Philippine Leroy Beaulieu, reaches new heights this season. In Venice, she wears a striking chainmail dress by The Attico, a literal heavyweight piece that reflects her character’s emotional journey. The dress is difficult, demanding, and powerful, much like the transformation Sylvie is undergoing.

(Image credit: Marie Etchegoyen/Courtesy of Netflix)

As her character moves toward independence and self-definition, her wardrobe follows suit. Tailored suits, strong silhouettes, and archive pieces from Alberta Ferretti dominate her looks. Nearly half of the season’s wardrobe pulls from archival fashion, reinforcing a larger industry shift toward vintage and authenticity.

These are clothes designed when the female body was the focus, not the afterthought. They are flattering, intentional, and built for real movement and presence. The result is fashion that feels lived in, not just styled for the camera.

Why Season 5 Feels Like a Turning Point

Fashion television often suffers from imbalance. One standout character; everyone else fades into the background. Season 5 of Emily in Paris avoids that trap completely. There is no worst-dressed character. There are no throwaway outfits. Every scene feels curated without feeling forced.

The show has also become a legitimate trend engine. Looks sell out. Social media recreations flood feeds. Designers featured on screen gain renewed relevance. At this point, Emily in Paris sits comfortably alongside runway shows and fashion weeks as a driver of conversation.

So is this the best fashion showcase television has ever seen? Season 5 makes a convincing argument. It balances aspiration with storytelling, fantasy with craft, and individuality with cohesion.

Emily in Paris is no longer just wearing fashion. It is shaping it.

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