A showgirl’s gotta shine.

Taylor Swift revealed the album cover and artwork for her highly anticipated 12th studio album, “The Life of a Showgirl,” on Wednesday — and her outfits, styled by longtime collaborator Joseph Cassell Falconer, would fit right in at a classy cabaret.

Photographed by iconic fashion shutterbugs Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott, the cover shows the superstar partially submerged in water while wearing a crystal-embellished Area dress and a stack of bracelets to match, including a diamond bangle by Zydo Italy.

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Swift leans even more literally into her record’s revue inspiration in other images, donning a towering feathered headdress in one shot and striking a showgirl’s pose in a bejeweled bra top, briefs and marabou boa in another.

Taylor Swift revealed the album cover and artwork for her highly anticipated 12th studio album, “The Life of a Showgirl,” on Wednesday. Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott

Swift’s outfits would fit right in at a classy cabaret. Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott

In one shot, she perches atop a chair “Vigilante S—t”-style, clad in a bespoke crystallized bodysuit from The Blonds. Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott

In one particularly arresting shot, the Grammy winner stares down the camera in a stage-ready costume bursting with pink ostrich feathers — a custom creation by The Blonds, as the brand exclusively tells Page Six Style.

And fans of Swift’s sultry “Vigilante S—t” sequence during the Eras Tour will surely appreciate the snap of her balancing on a chair in ruby earrings by Etho Maria and a crystallized maroon bodysuit and opera gloves, another bespoke look from Phillipe and David Blond’s New York label.

A second custom look from The Blonds pairs perfectly with a sparkling headpiece and embellished stilettos. Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott

And speaking of headwear, this towering feathered topper is Moulin Rouge-ready. Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott

The pop queen is famous for shifting her style to suit her ever-evolving sound; her edgy “Reputation” era was synonymous with snake prints, combat boots and camouflage patterns, for instance, while her sugary-sweet “Lover” album was marked by iridescent sequins and pastels aplenty.

Most recently, while promoting 2024’s “The Tortured Poets Department,” Swift drew sartorial inspiration from the great female poets of the past in corsets, plaid and a parchment-and-ink color palette.

And while the pop queen’s loved sparkly dresses since the start of her career in the mid-2000s, her new era’s shaping up to be her glitziest, most glamorous one yet.