Trends

M&S Satin Trousers Bring Quiet Luxury to Spring for Just £30

M&S is selling satin trousers for £30 as the SS26 quiet luxury trend hits the high street, backed by Ferragamo, Schiaparelli, and Emma Stone.

Mia Chen2 min read
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M&S Satin Trousers Bring Quiet Luxury to Spring for Just £30
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Ferragamo, Schiaparelli, Ulla Johnson, and Carven sent them down the SS26 runways with a minimalist hand. Emma Stone wore ivory satin trousers to a Louis Vuitton and W Magazine awards season dinner in January, pairing them with a satin blouse and a sandy-beige coat in a full monochromatic co-ord. Now Marks & Spencer is selling the silhouette for £30, and the quiet luxury case for satin trousers has never been easier to make.

The fabric does the heavy lifting here. That glossy sheen and fluid drape read expensive in a way that denim simply cannot, and the comfort level sits somewhere between tailored trousers and your best loungewear, which is precisely why the trend has cut through. Hailey Bieber, Katie Holmes, and Kendall Jenner have all been spotted in the style, each leaning into the same restrained, nothing-to-prove dressing that defines the quiet luxury conversation right now.

On the SS26 runways, the approach was consistently minimal. Ulla Johnson styled the satin pant with a matching blazer, letting the fabric's natural sheen carry the look without layering on accessories or competing textures. Carven and Schiaparelli took a similar line. The message was the same across all four houses: the trouser is the statement, so let it breathe.

At £30, the M&S entry point makes that runway logic accessible without compromise on wearability. For a casual spring take, a light knit and clean trainers keep the look grounded and off-duty without losing the polish the satin silhouette brings. For evenings, a satin blouse or blazer in a matching or tonal shade creates the kind of co-ord that Stone pulled off so precisely at that January dinner: intentional, understated, and quietly expensive-looking.

The styling discipline required is actually minimal. The sheen already signals effort, so overworking the outfit undercuts the whole point. That restraint, the willingness to trust a single strong fabric choice and edit everything else back, is what separates the quiet luxury approach from its louder alternatives. At this price, the barrier to getting it right is lower than it's ever been.

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