
At the Chopard Miracle Gala Evening in Cannes, May 2026, Petra Nemcova wore a white tailored suit with Chopard High Jewelry, and the black corset layer shifts the whole red carpet mood.
Strong tailoring. Unexpected pairing. That combination is what made Petra Nemcova stand out on the red carpet arrivals at the Chopard Miracle Gala Evening during the 79th Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, France on May 18, 2026.
In this frame, Petra Nemcova at the Chopard Miracle Gala wears a crisp white three-piece suit – an oversized blazer worn open and relaxed over a black strapless corset-style top, paired with high-waisted wide-leg trousers that fall in a clean, uninterrupted line. The fabric looks smooth with a soft drape, not stiff, so the volume feels intentional rather than boxy. Notice how the jacket sits slightly away from the body, creating space around the waist and letting that dark underlayer do its job.
And that black corset is the pivot. It’s structured, sharply cut across the top, and deliberately shorter than the blazer, exposing a slice of midriff that breaks up what could’ve been a straightforward white suit. It looks minimal at first glance, but it’s actually built on contrast – black against white, soft drape against firm structure, covered shoulders against bare neckline. That tension keeps it from feeling predictable.
Accessories stay precise. She carries a metallic silver embossed clutch and wears silver strappy sandals that echo the cool tone of the suit without competing. Around her neck, Chopard High Jewelry adds color in the form of a vivid green beaded choker with matching stud earrings – small in scale, but they cut through the monochrome and pull the look back into gala territory.
This is the kind of clean, modern look that defines a sharp celebrity red carpet moment without relying on a traditional gown. For more high-profile formal style, the refined tailoring here fits comfortably within celebrity red carpet coverage that leans into structure over sparkle.
Would you wear this suit with the corset as is, or swap it for a silk cami to soften it?
I’m at a confident 8/10 here – polished, deliberate, and perfectly suited to an international gala setting where tailoring can speak louder than tulle. The corset is the decision that makes it.








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