West End Girl. Abra SS26

Who the fuck is Madeline?” asks Lily Allen on her new album “West End Girl” – the result of sixteen days spent in the studio dissecting and analyzing her unhappy marriage to David Harbour. The album – released without promo or a meticulous marketing ploy – has unofficially claimed the title of AOTY, and Allen seems to be living her best life, dressed as the Madeline for Halloween.

Her latest work plays with different tropes: the busy housewife, the single mother, the other woman. Interestingly, I see a full-circle correlation with the heroine of Abraham Ortuño Pérez’s spring–summer 2026 collection. Abra – the brainchild of one of the industry’s most renowned footwear designers – has always been “for the girls.” The woman Ortuño Pérez envisions this season certainly has a past: a good girl gone bad for her own sanity’s sake.

The line-up features hyper-girly pink satin skirts, flirty mini dresses finished with rosettes, and princessy frou-frou gowns made from translucent materials – yet all that saccharine sweetness is grounded by the grittiness of fringed suede boots, tough leather bombers, and very good-looking cut chino shorts. If “West End Girl” were a fashion collection, it would be this one from Abra.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Devastatingly Beautiful. Ponte SS26

Devastatingly beautiful” is perhaps the only way to describe Ponte, Harry Pontefract’s brainchild that relentlessly pushes the boundaries of the body and proportion. His lookbooks – photographed by Mark Kean – read like portraits of characters: often oneiric, sometimes distant, at times even unsettling.

What makes Ponte one of the most exciting projects today – or, as Pontefract himself puts it, neither fashion nor art, but “its own kind of beast” – is the staggering range of techniques he employs, defying easy classification. His work exists somewhere between the orbits of haute couture and arte povera – painstaking yet brutal, innovative yet honest. One of the spring–summer 2026 suits, for instance, was colored in pencil for hours on end, then hand-burnished with a spoon to blend the layers into one another. Another look features a dress made of wire filaments – “finer than hair,” according to the designer – cut by a hairdresser and brushed with magnets. The “second-skin” bodysuits, composed of diamond-shaped pieces of hosiery, have an eerily chilling effect. I have goose-bumps.

There are also the striking, Sarah Lucas–like experiments: worm-like tubes wrapping the body, or a felted wool dress sculpted to resemble organs erupting from within. And then there’s the mini-dress that, upon closer inspection, is constructed from all kinds of debris – leftover textiles, wires, paper bags, even a tiny putto figurine poking out of its sleeve. It’s stunning – and devastating at the same time.

In an age oversaturated with collections, looks, and clothes, it’s increasingly rare for a brand to truly capture one’s attention. Ponte makes you not only surprised – even shocked! – but also encourages you to pause – and contemplate.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Stars Aligned. Rick Owens SS26

Quite naturally, Rick Owens’s spring–summer 2026 collection – presented, as usual, in the courtyard of the Palais de Tokyo, just steps away from the Palais Galliera where his retrospective is now on – gave you chills and a sense of otherworldly euphoria, as if straight out of his Temple. The lineup of models, their eyes obscured by black contacts that covered not only the irises and pupils but also the whites, embodied all the hallmarks of the designer’s alien-esque uniform, honed over three decades: muted, bleached tones; 1930s-inflected silhouettes evoking Old Hollywood; sharply exaggerated shoulders; sculptural draping; and towering platforms that stretched the silhouette to near-impossible proportions. The spiky, fringed leather capes were the work of young London-based designer Straytukay, while the print – a rarity at an Owens show – appeared on the long dresses in the finale and was a reproduction of the designer’s own star chart, originally drawn for him by his father. Whatever the astral prophecy was, the stars truly did align.

ED’s SELECTION:

Rick Owens Athena Arrowhead One-shoulder Draped Crushed-velvet Gown


Rick Owens Cantilever 8 Hydra Leather Sandals


Rick Owens Padded Shell Bomber Jacket


Rick Owens Fog Layered Suede Mini Skirt


Rick Owens Tied Taco Kiss Leather Ankle Boots

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Sensual Harness. Hermès SS26

H is for heritage, H is for Hermès.

Thanks to @dariagraczykowska, I had the immense pleasure of seeing – and touching – the brand’s spring–summer 2026 collection at its Parisian showroom. You can imagine my delight during the grand tour, as I found Nadège Vanhée-Cybulski’s latest collection to be one of her best yet.

Why? Because it channeled a newfound sensuality that felt as tough as the cognac-hued leathers and as feminine as the silk-printed scarves that covered the models’ breasts, tied meticulously beneath butter-soft harnesses. Vanhée-Cybulski drew inspiration from the Camargue – home to the white horses used by the region’s manadiers to herd bulls. Hence, the revisited equestrian aesthetic: bohemian in its play with vibrant prints, yet bourgeois in its solid composure.

A saddle from the Camargue, studied in Hermès’s conservatoire, led the creative director to design this season’s sublime leather corsets in earthy tones, worn with quilted riding jackets or styled over bandeaus. The reimagined corsets – evoking something of Christian Lacroix’s bravado, yet perfectly attuned to contemporary times – looked killer-chic when paired with matching leather pencil skirts and the most impeccable riding boots. I also loved the utilitarian jumpsuits and that one brown leather coat with rounded shoulders.

These clothes – and accessories, from the sumptuous suede Birkin to archival models revisited in thick canvas – are made to be worn and lived in, without fear of a little dirt along the way to your destination. Hermès crafts some of the most exquisite pieces in the world, and I found it truly intriguing – and subversive – that Nadège embraced the less glossier, more real attitude about them.

ED’s SELECTION:

Rouge Hermes Matte Lipstick


Rose Hermes Silky Blush Powder


Rouge Hermès Lipstick Limited Edition Rose Primaire


Les Mains Hermes Nail Enamel


Trait d’Hermes Lip Pencil


Rouge Hermès, Silky Lipstick Shine

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Scuba-Chic. Rabanne SS26


Similarly to Dries Van Noten‘s Julian Klausner and the Proenza boys at Loewe, Rabanne’s Julien Dossena was mentally by the beach this season, surrounded by surfers in spirit. His collection, however, felt among the most intriguing – especially in its brilliant menswear. There weren’t many looks, but each one, styled with scuba-diving pants, oversized flip-flops, and vintage Hawaiian-print shirts, exuded an undeniably cool attitude. The metallic flower necklaces – a nod to Paco Rabanne’s conceptual use of metal – added an especially striking touch. The interest in scuba style recalled Nicolas Ghesquière’s now-cult-classic Balenciaga collection from 2003. Dossena, who worked with Ghesquière for years, had the Louis Vuitton creative director cheering him on from the front row. As for womenswear, Julien played with 1950s pin-up references, making skirts fuller, florals bolder, and colors flashier. His use of exaggerated belt buckles gave the collection a tongue-in-cheek energy.

ED’s SELECTION:

RABANNE Lace-trimmed Chainmail Midi Skirt


RABANNE Chain-embellished Paisley-print Crepe Maxi Dress


RABANNE Paillette-embellished Twill Shoulder Bag


RABANNE Cropped Scalloped Stretch-lace Top


RABANNE Gathered Striped Wool-blend Midi Skirt

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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