'Simplicity was important, and comfort, and fit': Can a spacesuit be stylish?


By AGENCY

The all-woman crew for Blue Origin’s upcoming flight into space. Fashion brand Monse had a hand in helping to redesign the Blue Origin flight suits with its all-female launch in mind. Photo: The New York Times

What do you wear for your first trip to space?

If you are like most people, probably whatever spacesuit or astronaut outfit the company (or government agency) you are flying with provides.

However, if you are Lauren Sanchez – journalist, pilot, children’s book author, philanthropist and fiancee of Jeff Bezos, the second-richest man on the planet – you have another idea.

You think, “Let’s reimagine the flight suit.”

“Usually, you know, these suits are made for a man,” Sanchez said recently on a video call from the West Coast. “Then they get tailored to fit a woman.”

Or not tailored: an all-female spacewalk, planned in 2019, had to be cancelled because Nasa (National Aeronautics and Space Administration of the US) did not have two spacesuits that fit two women (instead, they sent out one woman and one man).

But Sanchez is part of the first all-female flight since Russia sent Valentina Tereshkova on a solo flight in 1963.

She will be going up on a Blue Origin flight with a pop star (Katy Perry), a journalist (Gayle King), two scientist/activists (Amanda Nguyen, Aisha Bowe) and a film producer (Kerianne Flynn).

Read more: One giant leap for fashionkind? A luxury brand unveils spacesuits for astronauts

Feeling like yourself is what makes you feel powerful, she said, and you shouldn’t have to sacrifice that because space has been – well, a mostly male space.

Even if you are a space tourist, rather than a full-fledged astronaut.

A detail from the redesigned flight suits for Blue Origin’s upcoming spaceflight, which will have a first all-female crew. Photo: The New York TimesA detail from the redesigned flight suits for Blue Origin’s upcoming spaceflight, which will have a first all-female crew. Photo: The New York TimesSo, five months ago, Sanchez got in touch with Fernando Garcia and Laura Kim, co-founders of the brand Monse, who are also creative directors of Oscar De La Renta (Garcia and Kim made Sanchez’s 2024 Met Gala outfit).

She wanted to know if they would work with Blue Origin, Bezos’ space company.

“I was like: Right away!” Garcia said over Zoom.

The result of their collaboration will be unveiled Monday (April 14), when Sanchez and crew climb into the Blue Origin rocket in West Texas, and take off for their approximately 11-minute trip past the Karman line and into zero gravity.

“I think the suits are elegant,” Sanchez said, “But they also bring a little spice to space.”

When King tried hers on, she said, she loved it. She thought the suits looked “professional and feminine at the same time”.

Which, when it came to space, happened to be “something we had never seen before”, she said.

The Monse Blue Origin suits, which were produced by Creative Character Engineering, look like a cross between Star Trek (on top) and the outfits Elvis wore in his Las Vegas years (on the bottom).

They are made of a flame-resistant stretch neoprene, rather than the shiny polyester-looking fabric of the original, baggier, Blue Origin suits, as modelled by Bezos on a flight in 2021 (Sanchez helped design those suits as well).

“We really didn’t know where to start,” Garcia said. “There’s no precedent. All the references are men’s spacesuits.”

Because Blue Origin flyers do not go out into space, Garcia and Kim did not need to incorporate the life-support system of the classic astronaut suit, but they still had to work within technical specifications.

“Simplicity was important, and comfort, and fit,” Garcia said. “But we also wanted something that was a little dangerous, like a motocross outfit. Or a ski suit. Flattering and sexy.”

Kim added: “I, personally, would want to look very slim and fitted in my outfit.”

They batted ideas back and forth with Sanchez.

“We even had a meeting on what underwear Lauren is going to wear,” Garcia said.

“Skims!” Sanchez responded.

The result is a body-con jumpsuit, with a compression layer, a slight mandarin collar, a dual-zip front that can look like it is open to the waist, a belt, and a zipper on the side of each calf, so the wearer can create a flared effect according to their own taste.

“You’ll be able to zip or unzip,” Garcia said (King said she liked the bell-bottom idea).

The suits also feature a darker, ombre effect on the sides that works to shade the body, almost like trompe l’oeil. There are small pockets on the arms, but leg pockets were dropped because they were too bulky, Kim said.

Every crew member was 3D body-scanned so the suits could be made exactly to their measurements.

Nguyen called the suits “revolutionary”.

Read more: Is it fashion or for skiing? How brands are swapping city suits for ski suits

Clothes are about identity and representation, she said, and by allowing women to look like women, the suits are a statement that “women belong in space”.

As to why fashion designers were suddenly so popular with the astrophysics set, Garcia said, “If we make suits look approachable and like something anyone could wear, then space might feel a little bit less distant.”

Maybe, Garcia said, when people saw the Monse Blue Origin style, they might even think they “want to buy that spacesuit to go to the gym”.

In fact, he added, he and Kim were thinking they might “set up an office on Mars”.

In both cases, he was joking. Sort of.

It turned out that Garcia, Kim and Sanchez were already working on something else for Blue Origin, related to “the moon”.

Blue Origin has been selected by Nasa to develop the human landing system for the Artemis V mission to the moon, but Sanchez would not say if Monse would have anything to do with that.

She was, however, excited to give space travel a new look.

“This isn’t what you would call ‘normal,’ but neither is sending six women into space,” she said. “If you want to do glam, great. If you don’t, great.”

The point was everyone gets to choose.

Then she quoted something she said Perry had told her: “We’re putting the ‘ass’ in astronaut.” – ©2025 The New York Times Company 

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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fashion , trends , Nasa , Blue Origin

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