How do you even begin to touch the Lady Dior? A bag so iconic it’s pretty much royalty. A fun fact: it wasn’t even called the ‘Lady Dior’ to begin with. It was the ‘Chouchou’ (French for ‘favourite’) until 1996, after France’s First Lady gave one to Princess Diana, who proceeded to make it the most famous handbag on the planet.
To reinvent a bag with that kind of history, you need a new vision. And for his first major accessories campaign, Jonathan Anderson has signalled his new era by casting the most compelling, art-house-adjacent women working today: the unnervingly brilliant Mia Goth, ‘Anora’s breakout star Mikey Madison and the woman who defined the last decade of indie chic, Greta Lee.
With a cast that sharp, Anderson’s move is even smarter. He’s made the Lady Dior personal and charming. Arriving in January 2026, his new mini versions are reimagined as lucky talismans, a witty wink to both Christian Dior’s famed superstition and Anderson’s own Irish roots. The Mini Lady Dior Clover comes scattered with embroidered four-leaf clovers and a tiny red ladybug.
The Mini Lady Dior Buttercup is even more of a craft-lover’s dream, featuring 3D, bright-yellow buttercups blooming from the cannage quilting. The masterstroke, however, is the tiny embroidered bee – a classic House emblem – seen gathering pollen from one of the flowers. It’s this blend of archival reverence (the cannage pattern itself is a nod to the Napoleon III chairs from Dior’s first show) and a surreal, playful touch that is pure Anderson. The ‘D, I, O, R’ charms still swing, but the bag is now, unmistakably, his.

Discover more here.
photography. courtesy of David Sims
words. Gennaro Costanzo
















































































































































































