Quince teams with Jamie Mizrahi on effortless spring staples
Jamie Mizrahi brings celebrity-stylist polish to Quince, where a $19.90 tee and a $174 leather tote anchor a spring capsule built for real life.

Jamie Mizrahi’s name usually signals red-carpet precision, but Quince is using her eye for something more practical: a spring capsule built to make elevated dressing feel easy, affordable and repeatable. The San Francisco-based brand, which has made a business out of polished basics, teamed with the Los Angeles stylist on a mix of trench coats, cashmere, linen, silk and leather pieces that read less like a fashion stunt than a working wardrobe.
Presented on Quince’s site as “Styled by Jamie Mizrahi,” the capsule leans hard into the brand’s core pitch of timeless, mix-and-match dressing. Quince’s spring capsule wardrobe page sums up the approach as “Timeless mix-and-match pieces for an instant upgrade.” That is the right frame for this collaboration, because the value here is not novelty. It is outfit logic: a comfort stretch trench coat over a silk skirt, a Mongolian cashmere polo with linen pants, a strapless European linen dress that can stand on its own or take accessories easily, and a wardrobe of pieces that can be re-worn without announcing themselves.
The assortment is built from Quince’s own pieces, including a comfort stretch trench coat, a Mongolian cashmere polo sweater, a 100% European linen strapless maxi dress, a washable silk maxi skirt and leather accessories. The pricing tells its own story. On the lookbook, a 100% Pima cotton luxe touch pocket tee is $19.90, the comfort stretch trench coat is $100 and an Italian leather triple compartment work tote comes in at $174. Third-party coverage puts the edit starting at $45. In a market where celebrity-stylist collaborations often land in the aspirational stratosphere, that price architecture matters. It makes the capsule feel less like a fantasy board and more like an accessible styling system.
Mizrahi brings obvious cachet to the project. WWD noted that she has styled Adele, Jeremy Allen White, Nicole Richie, Pedro Pascal and Mia Goth, while other coverage adds Jennifer Lawrence and Riley Keough to her client list. That roster explains the confidence of the edit: the silhouettes are quiet, the fabrics do the work and the message is unmistakable. This is not fashion built around logos or maximality. It is Quince doubling down on the current appetite for restrained luxury, only with a lower barrier to entry and less effort required to make it look expensive.
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