Palette Cleanser. Alaïa AW26

Before moving to Milan to join Versace for good, Pieter Mulier delivered one last outing at Alaïa – a collection that felt less like a grand finale and more like a palate cleanser, even a kind of foundation laid out for his successor.

During his five years at the brand, Mulier pushed Azzedine Alaïa’s codes in unexpected directions – sometimes achieving remarkable finesse, at other times proposing busy, hectic ideas that risked overdressing the woman. His epilogue, however, is pleasing precisely because it returns to the core of what the house represents at its essence: body-enhancing clothes that appear simple, yet are in fact the result of meticulous construction and extraordinary precision.

That was Monsieur Alaïa’s intention behind every haute couture and ready-to-wear collection; Mulier seems to have taken it fully to heart here – better late than never. “To reduce, reduce,” he concluded backstage. No bags, no jewelry. “Only beauty and clothes and a naked shoe.

And indeed, that understated beauty was visible in the clean lines of flared coats, scoop-neck engineered jersey dresses, and a perfectly tailored leather blazer.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Turn On. Tom Ford AW26

It’s a true rarity for a designer to turn on both the entire audience in the room and the thousands watching via livestream. Haider Ackermann has that high-voltage erotic sensibility which you just can’t fake. With his vision at Tom Ford, he can send people into a sensual trance, an awakening of sorts. But what he delivered yesterday at his third show for the house? It was seismic. Seismic sex.

The contemporary Tom Ford woman and man are ultimate séducteurs. One chilling glance is enough to drive you mad. And the razor-sharp lines of their elongated silhouettes work like an aphrodisiac, sending your love hormones into overdrive. Ackermann’s autumn–winter 2026 collection offers plenty of reasons to go feral – and perhaps even a little polygamous: slouchy trousers hanging low on women’s hips, held in place by a thin belt slipping out of its loops; a shrunken, see-through plastic trench paired with a babushka; dark-rinse denim, pre-faded and deeply creased; silk-scarf shirts unbuttoned down to the navel. All of it finished with kinky leather gloves.

We are witnessing a designer at the height of his powers. Enjoy the spicy, scorching ride.

ED’s SELECTION:


TOM FORD Patent-leather Pumps



TOM FORD Silver-tone And Plexiglas Bangle



TOM FORD Open-back Lace-trimmed Polka-dot Silk-crepe Maxi Dress



TOM FORD Asymmetric Crepe-jersey Gown



TOM FORD Wool, Mohair And Silk-blend Blazer

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Disarm The Status Quo. Matières Fécales AW26

The devastatingly beautiful drama of Matières Fécales is exactly what the hyper–high-gloss Paris Fashion Week needs. Hannah Rose Dalton and Steven Raj’s vision of the world is one of sinister, post-post-capitalist dystopia: blood-red-palmed opera gloves, dollar-bill masks, post-op bandages, and Mr. Monopoly eveningwear evoke a band of supervillains poised to take over the world. Or perhaps these were undercover agents sent to disturb and disarm the status quo?

Whatever the underlying concept, Matières Fécales is a brand that certainly shakes up the model-casting landscape in Paris. Models, artists and aristocrats of different ages and body shapes – many with striking, vivid faces that show signs of a lived life – walked the show, dressed to the nines in corseted jackets, full skirts, and torn ball gowns. Some looked visibly uncomfortable, but in a pleasure-sparking, fetishistic kind of way, and a few ankles seemed nearly sprained; but beauty is pain, after all.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Strategic. Saint Laurent AW26

I found Anthony Vaccarello’s latest collection for Saint Laurent a tad underwhelming – though I understand precisely what he was aiming for. In recent seasons, Vaccarello has leaned into a form of statement dressing sublimated from the archives of Yves Saint Laurent: think of the ruffled, hyper–maxi dresses that now dominate editorials, sweeping, theatrical, and unapologetically grand.

This latest offering, however, feels like a strategic retreat. It delivers a highly predictable vision of the contemporary Saint Laurent woman: razor-sharp black tailoring in the vein of Helmut Newton’s power-charged imagery; diaphanous, ultra-sheer lace dresses; oversized fur coats thrown over. READ MY FULL REVIEW HERE.

ED’s SELECTION:


SAINT LAURENT Grain De Poudre Wool And Silk-satin Blazer



SAINT LAURENT Leather Gloves



SAINT LAURENT Knitted Maxi Dress



SAINT LAURENT Gold-tone Agate Ring



SAINT LAURENT EYEWEAR Sl 902 Howl D-frame Acetate Sunglasses

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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