FASHION

URBAN JUNGLE

For Chanel Métiers d’art 2026 collection, New York dissolves into a mosaic of liquid Art Déco, female voices, and suspended urban myths.

MIU MIU

AT WORK

Miu Miu Spring/Summer 2026 redefines feminine workwear by turning the apron into a story of quiet strength and daily resilience that highlights essential bodies long overlooked.

CHANEL

Conversation Beyond Time

For Chanel’s Spring/Summer 2026, Matthieu Blazy delivers a powerful debut: a dialogue between memory and revolution that reignites the spirit of Mademoiselle. A collection that weaves together historical codes and future visions.

VALENTINO

Fireflies

Awakening and resistance: Fireflies by Alessandro Michele reignites the imagination, a collection where fashion becomes political language, and the dressed body reclaims its role as a space for vision and recognition.

CELINE

URBAN NATURE

Michael Rider redraws Celine’s aesthetic horizon: a collection that inhabits the city, traverses history, and dresses the everyday with precision and ease.

LACOSTE

THE LOCKER ROOM

With Lacoste’s The Locker Room collection, Pelagia Kolotouros transforms that intimate, transitional space into a setting charged with emotional tension and truth, where the athlete sheds their role and fashion begins to tell the story of the person.

BALENCIAGA

THE HEARTBEAT

Pierpaolo Piccioli’s debut at Balenciaga with the Spring/Summer 2026 collection, titled The Heartbeat, is a balancing act between respect for heritage and a new, concrete, and sartorial vision.

HERMÈS

Free Rein

Hermès Spring/Summer 2026: Nadège Vanhee-Cybulski blends artisanal techniques, equestrian references, and a formal design approach to translate the idea of freedom into a modern, feminine language.

LOEWE

A NEW LOEWE ERA

A new creative vision for Loewe, where experimentation meets contemporary sensitivity, redefinition blends with homage, and innovation intertwines with tension. Jack and Lazaro bring to the stage an unprecedented and daring narrative.

GIVENCHY

Powerful Femininity

Sarah Burton frees womenswear from its deepest-rooted clichés—not by borrowing from the masculine wardrobe, but by rewriting its language with delicacy and sensitivity. She doesn’t reject strength, but redefines it through a profound understanding of the female body.