Friday, January 23, 2026
ADVT 
Style

Ruth E. Carter makes Oscar history again with costume designer nomination for 'Sinners'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jan, 2026 11:51 AM
  • Ruth E. Carter makes Oscar history again with costume designer nomination for 'Sinners'

Ruth E. Carter has made history once more. With her Oscar nomination for “Sinners,” Carter has become the most-nominated Black woman in Academy Awards history across any category, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences confirmed Thursday. The trailblazing costume designer was recognized for her work on Ryan Coogler’s blues-steeped vampire epic, set in the Jim Crow-era Mississippi Delta.


“It’s ... pride, gratitude, responsibility,” Carter told The Associated Press. She previously won Oscars for “Black Panther” in 2018 and “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” in 2023, becoming the first Black woman to win two Academy Awards.


Carter is now a five-time nominee, surpassing Oscar-winning actor Viola Davis. She is tied with longtime collaborator Spike Lee and Morgan Freeman for the third-most nominations among Black creatives, behind the late Quincy Jones and Denzel Washington.


“This is a major step in the development of our voices in Hollywood,” she said.


Over her career, Carter has shaped the visual language of some of Hollywood’s most influential films. She earned Oscar nominations for her work on Spike Lee’s “Malcolm X” and Steven Spielberg’s “Amistad,” and received acclaim for period ensembles in projects including “The Butler,” “Selma” and the reboot of “Roots.” Her designs have also been worn by Washington, Oprah Winfrey, Eddie Murphy and Jerry Seinfeld, including for the original “Seinfeld” pilot.


“My trajectory has been about telling the story of culture,” Carter said. “Our history is being erased as we speak. So to have this responsibility of telling our stories — and being as authentic as I can — and being awarded for it, is a celebration.”


In “Sinners,” Carter said she approached costume design as an act of protection rather than embellishment, determined to safeguard the visual truth of Black working-class life, particularly sharecroppers and migrants of the early 20th century.


“We made something out of nothing,” she said. “There were hand-me-downs. There were patches. If the pants were long, we turned them up. If the hem was crooked, we left it. We wanted to show how we took things for what they were and still found a way to celebrate.”


The nomination marks another collaboration with Coogler, whom Carter credits as a vital voice for the future of Black cinema.


“I thank the Lord that Ryan Coogler was born,” she said with a laugh. “Because he continues to tell stories that are important to the culture.”


Carter said the nomination also reflects staying power in an industry often defined by reinvention.
“I was the first to be nominated. I was the first to win. And I’m still in the game,” she said. “If my being here tells young designers anything, I hope it’s that this isn’t a fluke. It’s hard work. It’s voice. It’s vision. And it’s staying.”

Picture Courtesy: Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP, File

MORE Style ARTICLES

Three fashion trends rule spring: big shoulders, real skin and dress-up with a day job

Three fashion trends rule spring: big shoulders, real skin and dress-up with a day job
As Paris Fashion Week wrapped up Tuesday after two weeks of debuts and shake-ups, three trends took hold. Shoulders were broadened and jackets snapped to attention. Skin showed on the wearer’s terms. And dressy, formal fashion came back — lighter, simpler, and meant for real life, not just red carpets.

Three fashion trends rule spring: big shoulders, real skin and dress-up with a day job

Chloe says it with printed flowers in Paris show

Chloe says it with printed flowers in Paris show
Kamali, now in her third stint at Chloé, knows the house from the inside. German-born like Karl Lagerfeld, she worked here under both Phoebe Philo and Clare Waight Keller before returning as creative director last year.

Chloe says it with printed flowers in Paris show

Issey Miyake imagines clothes with a will of their own at Paris Fashion Week

Issey Miyake imagines clothes with a will of their own at Paris Fashion Week
Silhouettes remapped the body — trousers integrated sleeve-like panels at the sides that impacted the model's stance, and single-sheet wraps and supple faux leathers seemed to “grow” around the torso. A netted, scuba-like look packed with toylike objects turned accumulation into profile, as if the clothes themselves consumed and imposed contour.

Issey Miyake imagines clothes with a will of their own at Paris Fashion Week

Cavalli's fluid gold Milan collection channels regal Elizabeth Taylor and free-spirited Jane Birkin

Cavalli's fluid gold Milan collection channels regal Elizabeth Taylor and free-spirited Jane Birkin
The Spring-Summer 2026 womenswear collection previewed Thursday night during Milan Fashion Week possessed all of the sexy glamour that has defined Cavalli.

Cavalli's fluid gold Milan collection channels regal Elizabeth Taylor and free-spirited Jane Birkin

The late Giorgio Armani's presence is felt in his final Emporio Armani collection

The late Giorgio Armani's presence is felt in his final Emporio Armani collection
Armani’s presence was felt in the elegant relaxed tailoring that mixed the masculine with the feminine, and distinctive with a traveler's touches: kimono fastenings on jackets, raffia crochet caps and flat walking sandals and soft leather booties.

The late Giorgio Armani's presence is felt in his final Emporio Armani collection

Giorgio Armani's sartorial creations interplay with Italian masterpieces at Milan museum exhibition

Giorgio Armani hesitated at first when the Brera Art Gallery proposed an exhibition celebrating the 50th anniversary of his signature label, placing his creations among celebrated Italian masterpieces by such luminaries as Raphael and Caravaggio.

Giorgio Armani's sartorial creations interplay with Italian masterpieces at Milan museum exhibition