Dior Eyewear Embraces Astrology and Lucky Charms

Jonathan Anderson's new Dior frames feature celestial and floral motifs as miniature talismans

Published on Feb. 27, 2026

In Jonathan Anderson's latest Dior eyewear collection, astrology, flowers, ladybugs, and clovers now adorn the frames, transforming the glasses into personal horoscopes and lucky charms. The motifs are discreetly integrated into the design, behaving like jewelry rather than mere printed logos. The frames maintain a classic silhouette from the front, but reveal the whimsical details in profile, bringing Dior's codes of fortune and femininity directly to eye level.

Why it matters

This collection marks a shift in how Dior is incorporating its iconic house codes, moving the brand's mythology of good luck and floral storytelling from handbags to eyewear. By turning the frames into miniature altars, Anderson is making the wearer's vision a canvas for Dior's romantic and slightly mystical aesthetic.

The details

The eyewear features subtle cosmic tracery, with stars and astrological symbols suggested rather than overt. Flowers unfold along the temples like pressed blossoms, while ladybugs and clovers, long-time Dior good luck charms, crawl delicately along the arms. Bows wrap the edge of the front like a three-dimensional parenthesis framing the face. These elements are not merely printed, but feel like they've been discreetly soldered onto the frames.

  • The new Dior eyewear collection debuted in February 2026.

The players

Jonathan Anderson

The creative director of Dior who designed this new eyewear collection featuring astrology and lucky charms as decorative motifs.

Diane Pernet

A respected fashion journalist, critic, curator and talent-hunter based in Paris who reviewed the new Dior eyewear collection.

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What they’re saying

“Astrology, talismans and tiny creatures of luck no longer sit on the bridge of the nose but dance along the edges of the lenses and, most importantly, on the side pieces that eclipse the logo in Jonathan Anderson's new Dior frames, for men and women turning eyewear into miniature altars to the house codes.”

— Diane Pernet, Fashion Journalist (ashadedviewonfashion.com)

“These aren't motifs printed onto sunglasses; they feel like pieces of jewelry discreetly soldered onto vision.”

— Diane Pernet, Fashion Journalist (ashadedviewonfashion.com)

The takeaway

By incorporating Dior's iconic house codes of astrology, florals, and lucky charms directly into the eyewear design, Jonathan Anderson is elevating the frames from mere accessories to personal talismans that transform the wearer's vision into a canvas for the brand's romantic and mystical aesthetic.