Courtesy of Prada and Axiom SpaceFashion / NewsFashion / NewsSpacewalk chic: Prada has unveiled its pioneering astronaut outfitsNASA’s future journeys to the moon will be outfitted by the Italian label, in collaboration with the cosmic tech company Axiom SpaceShareLink copied ✔️October 16, 2024October 16, 2024TextThom Waite Back in 2023, Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons outed themselves as HR Giger stans, including a nod to Alien’s Xenomorphs in their SS24 Prada men’s collection. Now, Prada is headed back to space, but for real this time. In case it slipped your mind, the Italian fashion house announced it landed a contract to design NASA’s new spacesuits – alongside space infrastructure developer Axiom Space – in October last year. Now, it’s finally unveiled the spacesuits themselves, which are set to be worn during mankind’s first return to the moon since 1972, as early as September 2026. This also means that the Prada astronaut outfits are set to be worn by the first female astronaut, and first person of colour, to step foot on the moon. Unfortunately, they won’t go bearing the actual Prada logo alongside the usual US flag, but the white suit is emblazoned with red stripes, in what’s surely a nod to the label’s Linnea Rossa line. On a more practical note, the spacesuits are built to “withstand extreme temperatures at the lunar south pole,” according to a press release. They will enable moonwalkers to endure the freezing temperatures in the permanently shadowed regions of the moon for at least two hours, and elsewhere astronauts will be able to prance about in low gravity for up to eight hours. NASA intends to return human beings to the moon as part of its ongoing Artemis project. In 2022, it launched Artemis 1, an uncrewed flight around the moon and back. Artemis 2, scheduled for September 2025 or later, will do the same with a crew of four astronauts. Artemis 3, which will take place no sooner than September 2026, is the big one: a crewed surface landing, which will see two crew members spend almost a week near the moon’s south pole, conducting scientific research. Why do we want to go back to the moon? Good question – it’s not just a massive runway for the new Prada collection. In the long term, the space agency intends to establish the first lunar space station, where humans can live, work, and conduct research on a permanent basis. Read more about that mission, and how it could provide a stepping stone for a future Mars colony, here. Escape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREBuy a copy of Dazed MENA to support relief efforts in LebanonGianni Versace is getting a major retrospective exhibition RIMOWAGeorge Riley unpacks her favourite travel spots for RIMOWA Hat summer! Meet the young milliners taking over London fashionKiko Mizuhara on slowing down, shutting up and touching grassWashing-up gloves have made it out the kitchen Stone Island Marina takes us straight to the source for SS26 Crying in couture: Ellie Misner’s new collection is a beautiful disaster OnMeet the creatives turning up the heat in Lagos with Burna Boy and OnThe biggest fashion collabs you missed in MarchIn pictures: Robbie McIntosh captures the next generation of Champion youthBLACKPINK style file: All of Lisa’s greatest fashion momentsEscape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy