The French house reworks its winter wardrobe with pieces that feel easy to wear, combining sharp tailoring with versatile fabrics and unexpected colour pairings.
At Celine, Michael Rider brings a sense of ease that feels both natural and refined.
This Fall/Winter season at Paris Fashion Week, a wave of Asian leading stars turned the city’s coveted front rows into a display of style and influence.
At Valentino, Alessandro Michele presents Interferenze, a collection where memory, discipline and creative freedom meet on the body.
In the heart of an imagined forest at the Palais d'Iéna, Miuccia Pradabrings fashion closer to the body and explores feminine intimacy with delicacy.
At Louis Vuitton, Nicolas Ghesquière imagines a futuristic fable
Blazy loosens up the Maison’s codes without losing their identity.
At Balenciaga, light becomes a way to reveal something deeper about humanity.
At Hermès, femininity has always been defined by precision and strength.
See the House’s Fall/Winter 2026 collection straight from Paris.
For Fall/Winter 2026, Sarah Burton imagines a wardrobe for rebuilding the modern woman
Jack McCollough and Lazaro Hernandez remind us to have fun.
Tune in at 12:30 a.m. Singapore time to watch the show.
Sixty years after 'Le Smoking' overturned all gender norms, Anthony Vaccarello brought this legendary icon back to its supreme position at the Fall/Winter 2026 show
For Fall/Winter 2026, Chloé celebrates the beauty of craftsmanship and community spirit through a collection imbued with humanity and poetry.
In Milan, Louise Trotter designs for Bottega Veneta a Fall/Winter 2026 collection where the structure softens and material becomes the real spectacle.
For Fall/Winter 2026, Maximilian Davis draws from the 1920s and the charged energy of underground speakeasies to shape a story of migration, freedom, and after-dark elegance.
The collection was a bold tribute to the house’s Sicilian roots, revealed in a commanding palette of black and unveiled under the watchful gaze of Madonna.
In Matteo Tamburini’s vision, protection isn’t about building armour. It’s about feeling held.
For Fall/Winter 2026, Max Mara draws on history and neo-medievalism to celebrate a sovereign, powerful and resolutely modern femininity.