Every Pair of Glasses and Sunglasses Worn in The Devil Wears Prada 2 — And Where to Buy Them
The most-searched sunglasses of 2026 are all in one film. Here is every frame, every designer, and the story behind who chose them.
When The Devil Wears Prada arrived in 2006, it proved something no other fashion film had quite managed: a pair of sunglasses could carry an entire character. Miranda Priestly never needed to raise her voice. She had her frames. Twenty years on, the sequel is in cinemas, and the eyewear is doing the talking all over again, this time with an even longer shopping list.

The Costume Designer Behind Every Frame: Molly Rogers
Patricia Field, the Oscar-nominated force behind the original film and Sex and the City, handed the job for the sequel to her longtime protégée Molly Rogers. Rogers had been in the room as associate costume designer the first time, which meant she inherited not just the brief but two decades of institutional memory.




The New Yorker
"I think it was so wonderful, the roadmap that Pat left me," Rogers told Harper's Bazaar Singapore. "I worked on the first one, I witnessed everything. There is no real deviation." On the pressure of following a cult classic: "I promised myself that I would just stay in my own bubble because I cannot deliver the best outfit if I am concerned about outside judgments."
On Miranda's eyewear specifically, Rogers was deliberate. "The hair colour and the choice of sunglasses drove that home," she said. Polly Mellen and Carmen Dell'Orefice were on the mood board.

Carmen Dell'Orefice

Polly Mellen
Miranda Priestly's Sunglasses and Glasses in The Devil Wears Prada 2
Meryl Streep's Miranda wears her eyewear as a statement settled long before anyone else walks into the room. She cycles through three distinct looks across the film, each one doing something different narratively.
Tiffany & Co. TF4238U are the white sunglasses worn by Meryl Streep that dominated every trailer and became the most-searched frames of the year.

Sculptural, cream-toned, gold-templed. Streep wore them so convincingly she turned up to the Dolce & Gabbana SS2026 show in full Miranda mode — same glasses, same energy — with Stanley Tucci at her side in his own on-set Tom Fords.

For the New York premiere, she switched to black Givenchy City GV40131I square sunglasses from the SS2026 collection, and was also spotted around the city in Gucci GG2170S tortoiseshell frames with brown gradient lenses.
The New York filming scenes open with the Jimmy Choo Solene JC5030U, a black frame with gold arms that sharpens every entrance. Paired with a peach trench and cognac leather skirt, it is Miranda at her most imperious.

When she sets the tinted lenses aside, she reaches for the Prada PR 05XV, a black cat-eye optical frame with a gold logo on the temples.


Anne Hathaway's Sunglasses in The Devil Wears Prada 2
Andy Sachs has spent two decades quietly absorbing everything Runway taught her. Her eyewear in the sequel is considered, knowing, and never try-hard — the wardrobe of someone who learned the rules well enough to stop following them.
Her most prominent on-screen frames are the Barton Perreira Samo Sun in black, oversized and completely assured. For a sharper cultural reference, she wears the L.G.R. Khartoum, a bold hexagonal silhouette drawn from 1990s design — unisex, retro-inspired, and immediately covetable. Her most insider move is the Khaite x Oliver Peoples 1961C, a collaboration that signals the kind of fashion literacy you only develop by surviving a magazine like Runway.

L.G.R. Khartoum

Barton Perreira Samo Sun
On the promotional tour, Hathaway continued the eyewear story. At the Mexico City press conference she wore the gold-templed rimless Bvlgari Tubogas BV40057U. She was also spotted in the Bvlgari Serpenti Viper BV40031I and, on her way to The Late Show, in Oliver Peoples OV5625SU wraparound sunglasses in black. For the Seoul premiere she wore Oliver Peoples Lerrue OV5615SU cat-eye sunglasses in dark burgundy, one of the standout frames of Spring 2026.

Oliver Peoples OV5625SU

Bvlgari Tubogas BV40057U
Stanley Tucci's Glasses in The Devil Wears Prada 2
Nigel has always been the man who sees everything without appearing to look. His frames in the sequel are the Tom Ford Private Collection FT5883-P, black aviators from Tom Ford's most premium tier at $1,500 at Saks Fifth Avenue. For the New York premiere, Tucci stepped out in David Beckham Eyewear DB 7046/S, now discontinued, making his on-set Tom Fords the pair worth tracking down.

Emily Blunt's Eyewear in The Devil Wears Prada 2
Emily Charlton is now head of PR at Dior, and her eyewear choices reflect exactly that. She is seen in Dior Pacific B4I 10A0 sunglasses in black and white, the kind of frame that says she left Runway and landed somewhere just as powerful.

The Official DIFF Eyewear x Devil Wears Prada 2 Collection
The film's official eyewear collaboration with DIFF Eyewear dropped on 23 April 2026 and is the most accessible entry point into the whole aesthetic. The collection includes The Miranda frames (milky white or black with grey gradient polarised lenses, $119), The Andy frames (sharp-edged, editor-ready), and The Emily frames (sleek, slightly dramatic). Both sunglasses and prescription frames are available.



Where to Shop the Looks
Tiffany & Co. TF4238U is available via luxury eyewear retailers including Pret a Voir and EZ Contacts. The L.G.R. Khartoum ships direct from LGR World. Barton Perreira Samo Sun and Khaite x Oliver Peoples 1961C are available through select stockists. Tom Ford Private Collection FT5883-P is available at Saks Fifth Avenue. The DIFF Eyewear collection ships now at diffeyewear.com.
Why the Eyewear in This Film Matters
Molly Rogers said it plainly: "She needed a shoulder. She really needed to command authority." Every frame in this film operates by the same logic. The right glasses do not finish a look. They announce it. Two decades on, that lesson has not changed — it has just got a longer credits list.