
A great blazer does a lot of work without trying too hard. It can turn a red carpet moment into a headline, a talk show appearance into a trend, or one TV scene into something people save on Pinterest for years. This year has been full of good ones, from a big movie sequel to the FIFA World Cup opening ceremony. Here’s a look at the celebrity blazers people can’t stop talking about right now.
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The Devil Wears Prada 2 Blazers
Nearly twenty years after the first movie, Miranda Priestly and Andy Sachs are back, and their outfits are doing a lot of the storytelling.
Anne Hathaway Double-Breasted Blazer


Andy doesn’t dress like an assistant anymore. Now that she’s Runway’s new features editor, her clothes have gotten a lot more confident, and this double-breasted blazer shows it. It’s made from a heavier wool with a fitted waist and structured shoulders, with two rows of buttons down the front. The fit stays close to the body without feeling tight.
It’s the kind of jacket that says she knows what she’s doing.
Anne Hathaway Pinstripe Blazer


This one is simple: fine pinstripes, a light and slightly silky fabric, one button holding it together. Andy wears it with matching pants later in the movie, and it’s one of her sharpest looks yet. The fit is close but not stiff, which keeps it from feeling too corporate.
Pinstripes have been showing up everywhere in office fashion this year, and this outfit is a good reason why.
Meryl Streep Striped Blazer (Black and White)


You can spot Miranda from across the room in this one. The stripes run side to side instead of up and down, which gives the whole jacket a bold, graphic look, and the shoulders have a bit of padding to sharpen the shape even more. It’s probably her most talked-about outfit in the whole movie.
Nobody does intimidating quite like her, and somehow even a loud pattern looks completely under control on her.
Lily Collins Yellow Blazer


Emily in Paris has always used bright colors to say something about its characters, and this yellow blazer is a good example. It’s double-breasted with a pointed lapel and buttoned cuffs, made from a structured wool with a soft lining inside. It’s bold but doesn’t feel like a costume, which is really the trick behind most of Emily’s outfits.
If you like the “dopamine dressing” trend, this is a good reference point.
Jean Smart Flowers Embellished Blazer


The floral details on this blazer only run along the lapel and shoulder instead of covering the whole thing, which is why it looks classy instead of over the top. Hacks has always had sharp writing and even sharper clothes, and this piece fits right in. Sometimes less really is more.
Sandra Sully Pink Blazer


News anchor outfits don’t get talked about much, but a good pink blazer on camera really stands out. This one sits somewhere between bubblegum and rose, with a shirt-style collar and one button, bright enough to show up clearly on screen without being too much. Broadcast fashion has to work under harsh studio lights for a long time, and this blazer holds up well.
Charlie Heaton Blazer


Late night talk show outfits have to do two things at once: look good under studio lights and still feel relaxed enough for a casual chat on the couch. This blazer manages both. It has a slightly loose cut through the shoulders and a simple lapel, nothing too fancy. Put together, but not stiff.
Menswear has been leaning toward looser, more relaxed fits lately, and this fits right in with that.
Ella Hunt Pinstripe Blazer


The stripes on this one are thin and close together, and the fabric has a soft lining. The fit is what really makes it work though: a slightly relaxed shoulder and a length that falls just past the hip, giving it a sharp look without feeling like a uniform.
Workwear pieces like this keep showing that office clothes don’t have to be boring.
Sasha Alexander Grey Blazer


Courtroom shows tend to stick with neutral colors, and there’s a good reason for that. The clothes need to feel serious without pulling attention away from the story. This grey blazer, with its clean collar and buttoned cuffs, does exactly that without any extra detail.
Grey isn’t the most exciting color, but it might be the most dependable one.
Keanu Reeves Blazer


Fitted but still comfortable. Plain suiting fabric. No loud details, nothing trying too hard, just clean lines and a color that works in pretty much any scene. There’s something nice about a blazer that just does its job quietly, and this one does exactly that.
Shaggy Embellished Blazer


Embellished blazers can go one of two ways: elegant or too much. This one stays on the elegant side. The detailing runs across the shoulders and lapel and catches the light without taking over the whole jacket. Underneath it, the cut is still simple and classic, so it feels wearable instead of like a costume.
Olivia Rodrigo Pink Blazer


Olivia Rodrigo‘s pink tweed set for a White House visit had a retro, preppy feel to it. The tweed has a visible woven texture, and the jacket is cropped right at the waist. She paired it with polished accessories that made the whole outfit feel put-together instead of costume-y, which is what makes it such a good example of dressing up for a formal moment without losing your own style.
Kate Hudson Brown Blazer


Running Point has given Kate Hudson a lot of good outfits, but this brown blazer might be the best one. The warm color comes from a soft wool blend, it’s single-breasted with a notch lapel, and it goes with almost anything you wear underneath. Brown has become one of the most popular neutral colors this year, and it’s easy to see why after seeing this. It looks expensive without actually being expensive.
Kerry Washington Paisley Print Blazer


Print blazers can be hard to pull off, but Kerry Washington makes it look easy. The paisley pattern is detailed and woven into a silk-blend fabric, and the sharp cut underneath, with structured shoulders and a fitted waist, keeps everything looking neat instead of busy. It turns a simple scene into an actual fashion moment.
Salma Hayek Blazer


Salma Hayek wore a red power suit at the 2026 FIFA World Cup opening ceremony, and it was one of the most talked-about outfits of the whole tournament. The blazer is made from a deep red fabric that matches the wide-leg trousers, and it gives her a strong, confident shape. A blouse underneath softens the look just enough. Not many outfits could hold their own in front of a stadium full of fans, but this one did.
Paige McIntosh Floral Embroidery Blazer


The embroidery on this blazer only runs up one side instead of covering the whole jacket, which is why it feels romantic instead of too much. The base fabric underneath is soft and simple, so the flowers stand out as a highlight instead of taking over the whole outfit. It’s a good pick if you want something with personality that you can still wear more than once.
Ciara Wyse Black Leather Blazer


Leather gives off a completely different feeling than fabric does. This black version leans into that, with smooth, slightly stiff leather that holds the structured shoulders in place. The shape stays sharp instead of slouchy, which is exactly why leather blazers have become a tougher alternative to a regular suit jacket.
Jaafar Jackson Met Gala Blazer


Sometimes the boldest move at a red carpet full of over-the-top outfits is to keep things simple. For a Met Gala built around costume art, Jaafar Jackson wore a sharply cut black blazer in a deep, slightly shiny velvet, with a lapel collar and a clean button front. Tailored pants, barely any accessories, nothing else competing for attention. The tailoring did all the talking here, and it worked.
Twila Hasbeck Floral Sequin Blazer


Sequins and florals don’t usually show up together, but putting both on one blazer makes something genuinely eye-catching. The sequins here are shaped into actual flowers instead of scattered randomly, which gives the jacket real texture instead of just shine. It’s held together by a base fabric with enough structure to keep its shape. This is a statement piece built for a scene people remember.
Nicole Kidman Purple Blazer


This purple is deep and rich, nothing close to pastel, and it instantly elevates the whole outfit. The blazer is cut from a smooth suiting fabric with one button and a fit that skims the waist, giving it a confident, almost regal feel without needing anything else to make a statement.
Bold colors like this are exactly why some outfits stick with people long after the show ends. You can see more outfits of Margo’s Got Money Troubles here.
Which Celebrity Blazer Are You Adding to Your Closet?
Every one of these celebrity blazers proves the same thing: a well-cut blazer can carry a scene, a red carpet, or an entire style era all on its own. Whether it’s Miranda’s sharp tailoring or Olivia Rodrigo’s preppy pink tweed, a good blazer never really goes out of style. My personal favorite has to be the Jean Smart Flowers blazer. Which one are you adding to your closet first?
