
Prada Designs NASA's Moon Spacesuit Inner Layer
Fashion meets space exploration as luxury brand Prada teams up with Axiom Space to create a high-tech cooling garment for NASA's moon missions. The sleek inner layer will keep astronauts comfortable during lunar surface walks.
When astronauts return to the moon, they'll be wearing something unexpected under their spacesuits: a garment designed by Italian fashion house Prada.
Axiom Space just revealed the inner layer of NASA's next-generation spacesuits, created in collaboration with the luxury brand for the upcoming Artemis III missions. The Liquid Cooling and Ventilation Garment (LCVG) might sound technical, but its job is simple: keep astronauts alive and comfortable in one of the harshest environments imaginable.
The garment works by circulating cool water through tubes that run across major muscle groups throughout the body. As astronauts move and work on the lunar surface, the system pulls heat away from their bodies and expels it into space.
But cooling isn't the only challenge. The LCVG also handles ventilation, using separate tubes to deliver fresh oxygen directly to an astronaut's face while continuously clearing away exhaled carbon dioxide.
Safety gets a major upgrade too. Unlike older spacesuits, this design includes a backup cooling circuit that kicks in if the primary system fails. When you're 240,000 miles from Earth, redundancy isn't a luxury.

Why This Inspires
The partnership between a space company and a fashion house might seem unusual at first. But Prada brings decades of expertise in fitting garments to the human body, plus deep knowledge of advanced materials and pattern making.
"We know how to fit things to people," explains Prada CMO Lorenzo Bertelli. The company's experience in creating high-performance fabrics and understanding how materials move with the body translates perfectly to spacesuit design.
The collaboration shows how innovation happens when different worlds collide. Space exploration needs engineers and scientists, sure, but it also needs people who understand comfort, fit, and how humans actually move and work in their clothes.
This isn't just about making spacesuits look good (though the sleek black design certainly does). It's about rethinking every detail to make them work better, combining aerospace engineering with fashion industry know-how to solve problems neither field could crack alone.
As NASA prepares to return humans to the moon for the first time in over 50 years, every piece of equipment matters. This stylish inner layer represents the kind of creative thinking that will keep astronauts safe, comfortable, and ready to explore.
More Images




Based on reporting by Engadget
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
Spread the positivity!
Share this good news with someone who needs it


