By Ema Lynnx /
Between French haute couture and Thai traditions, ” Fashion in all its glory » reveals an elegance where each silhouette becomes a cultural, almost political, act, at Decorative Arts MuseumIn Paris. From May 13 to November 1, 2026This large-scale project offers much more than a look at clothing: it stages a meeting between two visions of luxury, two cultures of detail, two ways of telling the world.
This rare exhibition reveals far more than a royal wardrobe; it unveils a woman, a vision, and a nation. With “Fashion in Majesty,” the Queen Sirikit appears as the embodiment of a Thailand elegant, deeply attached to its traditions and resolutely outward-looking.
An immersion into the textile soul of Thailand
At the Museum of Decorative Arts, the exhibition “Fashion in Majesty. Haute Couture and Tradition at the Court of Thailand” stands out as a cultural as well as an aesthetic journey.
From the very first rooms, the feeling is immediate. The silks capture the light with an almost liquid softness. The embroideries tell silent stories. Each piece seems to carry within it a fragment of identity.
More than 200 works, dresses, textiles and accessories make up this exceptional exhibition, conceived as a living reading of Thai tradition.
Here, fashion is never superficial. It is memory.

Queen Sirikit, the face of a nation
At the center of this exhibition, one figure stands out with an almost natural obviousness: Queen Sirikit.
In the 1960s, as Thailand redefined itself on the international stage, she became much more than a sovereign. She embodied an image. An elegance. An identity. Her appearances during state visits left a lasting impression. Not only for their refinement, but for their perfect balance. Each outfit reflected a subtle equilibrium between heritage and modernity, between tradition and openness.
Beyond her institutional role, Queen Sirikit stands out as a profoundly unique figure in the history of luxury and cultural representation. Where other sovereigns embodied a codified elegance, she introduced an almost narrative dimension to clothing. Each appearance became a subtle staging, meticulously planned down to the smallest detail, where the silhouette told a story as much as it seduced. Her sensitivity to textiles, her instinctive understanding of proportions, and her ability to engage in dialogue with both artisans and couturiers made her far more than an icon: a true artistic director ahead of her time. Through her choices, she did not follow fashion; she structured it, guided it, and gave it meaning, inscribing Thai aesthetics indelibly in the global history of elegance.
Through her, clothing becomes a language. A way to tell the world what Thailand is: a rich, sophisticated, and deeply rooted culture. She doesn’t simply wear creations. She conceives them, structures them, and situates them within a history. In collaboration with historians and artisans, she codifies the eight forms of traditional Thai dress, giving this heritage a new coherence and clarity.
But her commitment goes further: in 1976, she created the SUPPORT Foundation, dedicated to preserving artisanal skills. Behind this project lies a powerful intuition: without transmission, luxury loses its soul. Thanks to this initiative, ancestral techniques continue to thrive, carried on by generations of artisans.
Praise of the hand: at the heart of Thai traditions
The exhibition gives essential importance to gestures, to those invisible skills that give birth to beauty.
Lipao braiding, the fineness of the embroidery, the work with metal or silk… all these practices testify to a particular relationship with the material, made of patience and precision.
In this world, time is an ally. Each piece is the result of a slow, controlled, almost meditative process. This is where the uniqueness of Thai luxury lies: in this ability to transform a gesture into a work of art, knowledge into emotion.
A living tradition, looking towards the future
While the exhibition celebrates heritage, it never confines it to the past. On the contrary, it shows how these traditions continue to nourish contemporary creation.
La Queen Suthida and Princess Sirivannavari They continue this legacy today, supporting a new generation of Thai designers. Their creations reflect a natural evolution: the lines are modernized, the materials are reinvented, but the essence remains intact.
Tradition is not static. It breathes.
When Thailand tells its story in Paris
Presented in Paris, the world capital of luxury, this exhibition takes on a special dimension. It becomes a space for dialogue between two cultures of refinement.
But above all, it allows Thailand to tell its story differently. Not through clichés, but through what it holds most precious: its gestures, its materials, its stories.
Through the figure of Queen Sirikit, a whole vision of luxury emerges. A vision where elegance is not measured by appearance, but by depth.
Why does this exhibition mark a turning point?
“Fashion in Majesty” transcends the boundaries of a fashion exhibition. It explores the role of heritage in contemporary creation. It reminds us that true luxury is based on transmission, authenticity, and respect for origins.
And she shows, with rare accuracy, that a queen can be at once a muse, a strategist and a guardian of a culture.






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