Queer & Chic. Vivienne Westwood SS26

For spring-summer 2026 menswear, Andreas Kronthaler returned to Milan Fashion Week – and it did good to Vivienne Westwood, the brand whose soul was kind of devoid in the past few seasons.

The collection blended Kronthaler’s affection for fluid silhouettes and Milano’s sartorial heritage. Tailoring was slouchy and nonchalant, but utterly chic. The coats were broad-shouldered or leopard-printed, and full of Milanese charisma. Hunky men in dresses and killer-high platforms were an exuberant view – especially when seen in a passeggiata through a San Babila café and then out on street side marble-floor arcade. A rose-embroidered tabard with a mid-calf red satin boot was a look that was both ecclesiastical in its clerical regality and campy in its unabashed queerness.

This collection felt like one created in the presence of Vivienne’s spirit – or even blessed by her, straight from the fashion heaven.

ED’s SELECTION:

Vivienne Westwood Doll XL Embellished Tote

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Stranger By The Lake. Prada SS26

Mini-lengths and hairy legs. Peggy Guggenheim-inspired hats. Wallpaper prints and oversized florals you can spot on sciuras’ dresses in the Italian buses. Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons’ latest menswear collection feels like a vibe shift: instead of regality and sophistication, or a sharp take on the Prada uniform, a collection so straightforwardly joyful it’s nearly suspicious.

Nothing conceptual: more of an instinctual approach to summer dressing. Even fashion’s biggest brains need a season off, a mind-vacanza of sorts. “This has been the easiest collection I have ever done”, said Simons. Signora added: “Everything worked with everything.” There’s just something absolutely irresistible about a vintage-y t-shirt (with a seductive “Last Swim” print – the romantic thriller of “Stranger By The Lake” comes to my mind immediately), paired with cropped, aged leather jacket and tailored pants in colour-block shade. Or a simple, chic, all-white look. One of the boys looked both naïve and cool in a mini-length shirt-tunic, styled with a red raffia hat and a pair of flip-flops.

I can totally picture new Prada menswear on myself. All of it.

ED’s SELECTION:

Prada Men’s Re-Nylon Snap-Front Jacket


Prada Men’s Shuffle Leather Double-Monk Strap Mules


Prada Men’s Sartorial Linen Pants

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Slipcovers. Marie Adam-Leenaerdt AW25

Marie Adam-Leenaerdt is a Demna’s Balenciaga alumni. As the former creative director of the maison is departing for Milan to lead Gucci, fans of the style so synonymous with that era can with no hesitance head to Adam-Leenaerdt’s eponymous label. Her contributions to Balenciaga, like tea-dresses, boxy envelope skirts and sharp tailoring, are now all under her name. But the designer isn’t stuck in one place – her work is continuously updated with innovative thinking about dressing. Her mathematically-precise, sophisticated autumn-winter 2025 collection, shown back in March during Paris Fashion Week, at first seemed like a Joseph Beuys tribute (coats, suits and dresses in felted gray wool, all somewhat oversized and kept in bold geometric shapes). When the models came back around again, they had added a top layer to the garments, sort of like slipcovers for furniture (hence the show’s location in a home furnishings gallery). A coat was enlivened with a leopard print shell, a Margiela-ist triangle skirt got an electric blue gloss, and a super-chic mini shift became a trompe l’oeil cardigan coat in the vein of Coco Chanel. Marie Adam-Leenaerdt champions clothes that aren’t only modern-looking, but are also intelligent.

ED’s SELECTION:

Marie Adam-Leenaerdt Oversized Scarf-detailed Gathered Wool Cardigan


Marie Adam-Leenaerdt Double-breasted Wool-twill Blazer


Marie Adam-Leenaerdt Bow-embellished Leather Slippers


Marie Adam-Leenaerdt Checked Wool Midi Skirt


Marie Adam-Leenaerdt Lace-trimmed Satin Blouse


Marie Adam-Leenaerdt Gathered Cotton-jersey Midi Dress

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Madame Minimalism. Carven Pre-Fall 2025

Carven‘s pre-fall 2025 collection, officially credited to the brand’s studio, is a good-looking transition moment between Louise Trotter’s work at the maison and the brand’s current creative director – and long-time collaborator of Trotter – Mark Thomas. The line-up, offering garments and accessories so wearable and easy-in-approach that it’s hard not to fall in love with their daily allure, is informed by blousy smock tops, wraparound apron shapes and a penchant for fabrics that appear structured to the eye yet soft around the body. One of the dresses with flannel on front and crushed lining in the back reminisces a 1950s couture dress with its strikingly simple, yet chic silhouette. Then you’ve got all the bubbly, t-shirt-inspired dresses and tops, minimal, timeless, versatile. The knits and cashmere shifts are pieces to be grateful for when you need to leave home looking pulled together. Carven became a go-to brand for less is more women who aren’t after The Row’s sophisticated oddness or Phoebe Philo’s contemporary strictness; the brand offers a warmer, cozier approach to minimalism. A madame minimalism.

ED’s SELECTION:

CARVEN Layered Cotton-gauze Gown


CARVEN Tie-detailed Cashmere Cardigan


CARVEN Organza Midi Skirt


CARVEN Louise Leather Clutch


CARVEN Oversized Satin-twill Jacket


CARVEN Wool-twill Mini Dress

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Lovers. Gabriela Hearst Resort 2026

Gabriela Hearst makes no-nonsense clothes. Her work is often criticized for lucking “edge” – but then, somebody has to make proper, classic, always-good-looking clothes. And there actually is something edgy about her resort 2026 collection, starring Malgosia Bela, Leon Dame and Alex Olson, photographed by Zoë Ghertner. Some context: the designer is lately obsessed with Tarot, pulling a card each morning and writing down the results. The Lovers card in the Marseille deck gave this collection its radiant color palette: cobalt blue (take a look at the sumptuous cashmere poncho she did in this magnetic hue), with sprinkles of pastel-pink and bottle-green. It also gave her a template for this simple, but evocative lookbook. In the Marseille deck, there are three figures on the Lovers card rather than the usual pair: two women and a man. Hearst did some rearranging, and she’s got one woman and two men in these pictures. A power move. The garments, un-fussy and “un-styled”, are remarkably handsome: think M-65 field jackets, double-face cashmere coats and all-black eveningwear. Looking for edge? There’s the Americana-inspired cow print, a lovely springboard from the understated vibe Hearst’s clothes emanate with.

ED’s SELECTION:


Gabriela Hearst Girard Shirred Dress in Sapphire Aloe Linen

Gabriela Hearst Lacquered Tote Bag in Black & Ivory Patchwork Leather

Gabriela Hearst Lyla Knit Ponco in Dip Dye Bordeaux Multi Welfat Cashmere



Gabriela Hearst Amethyst Stalactite Necklace

Gabriela Hearst Harriet Raffia Mule

Gabriela Hearst Wyn Jacket in Recycled Denim Linen

Gabriela Hearst Fatima Crochet Skirt in Multi Cashmere


Gabriela Hearst