Debonair Cool. Magda Butrym Pre-Fall 2026

Introducing Magda Butrym’s pre-fall 2026 lookbook: an updated wardrobe imbued with a modern sense of urgency.

In this latest pre-collection, Magda reflects on the meaning of elegance – something fragile and subtle, expressed as much through attitude as through form. For the Warsaw-based designer, elegance is refined yet spontaneous, sophisticated but never complicated. It is about impeccably constructed garments in which a woman can move and feel at ease, never constrained. They carry an unmistakable, debonair cool. READ MY FULL REVIEW HERE.

Credits:

Creative Director: Magda Butrym
Photographer: Robin Galiegue
Video: Tatiana + Karol
Stylist: Jacob Kjeldgaard
Talents: Karyna Maziar, Athiec Geng, Kris Krystal
Styling Assistant: Ioana Ivan
Make-Up: Lucy J. Bridge
Hair: Damien Boissinot
Nails: Marzena Kanclerska
Set Design: Anna Szczęsny
Art Coordinator: Edward Kanarecki
Casting: Piergiorgio at DM Casting

ED’s SELECTION:


Magda Butrym Crocheted Cotton Hat



Magda Butrym Embroidered Cotton-blend Jacket



Magda Butrym Ruched Floral-print Stretch-silk Mock-neck Top



Magda Butrym Studded Snake-effect Leather Wedge Mules



Magda Butrym Brigitte Embellished Suede Tote



Magda Butrym Crocheted Cotton Mini Skirt

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Defiance. Yohji Yamamoto AW26

Yohji Yamamoto, a designer so often – and so productively – faithful to black, detonated expectations this season. Guests entering the show space were met by two suspended speed bags, hovering between the ceiling and the runway. When the models emerged, some punched the bags, others barely brushed them; one kissed one, while a few simply stared. It was a telling prelude to a collection about confrontation and restraint, aggression and dignity – about how clothing can act as a kind of moral armor.

On the runway, that armor took tangible form. Yamamoto delivered one of his most colorful collections in years, though “colorful” here still meant disciplined, weighted, serious. The opening looks carried militaristic undertones: camouflage patterns coated double-breasted jackets and padded boilersuits, establishing a mood of readiness. Voluminous overcoats were paired with trousers cut from meaty corduroy and utilitarian jumpsuits in thick cotton, many printed with paint-like marks that looked less decorative than combative.

Elsewhere, padded coats arrived in stony beige; hair was teased into frizzy, defiant bouffants; and crushed beer cans were reassembled into a waistcoat and headgear – wry, César Baldaccini–inspired gestures that felt like survivalist poetry. In a fashion system obsessed with novelty and noise, Yamamoto continues to propose something rarer: clothes as stance, as shield, as a way of moving through the world with controlled defiance. It is precisely this posture – sharp, slightly arrogant, unyielding – that makes him not just relevant, but essential, one of the last designers of his generation for whom dressing remains an ethical act.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Long Game. Hermès AW26

Hermès’s Véronique Nichanian has always insisted that luxury is not a spectacle but a system, and in her final season, that conviction crystallized into a collection that elegantly distills her 37 years at the maison. This was Nichanian’s long game, and she won. Her celebrated détails égoïstes – those “selfish” refinements that reward only the wearer – were everywhere: the interior of a jacket as considered as its exterior, a zip as impeccably functional as it is beautiful, off-center bellows pockets, étrivière stitching, double lambskin lapels. These are clothes that recognize one another instantly, like old friends reunited, hand and eye aligned through private signals of craft.

A crocodile-leather coat in the inkiest shade of black, a reversible cashmere-and-wool travel jacket, a double-breasted suit in pinstriped leather: each piece stands on its own yet remains quietly mobile, designed for lives in motion rather than moments of display. Nothing feels “too much”. Instead, the collection moves with assurance through a season conceived to endure far beyond itself. Nichanian’s departure – serene,but grand – opens space for the impending arrival of Grace Wales Bonner, whose debut remains a year away. Yet this collection resists the tone of farewell. It plays more like a manifesto: a reminder that at Hermès, innovation has always emerged from renewing the bond between body, garment, and time. Clothes for now, and – stubbornly – for forever.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Black Hole. Comme Des Garçons Homme Plus AW26

Not that Rei Kawakubo needs any introduction, but her name has been louder than usual this fashion week. Jonathan Anderson’s incredible sophomore men’s collection for Dior took many cues from Comme des Garçons Homme Plus, especially in its distorted, tweaked tailoring – pure Rei at its core. And the collection she presented yesterday was nothing short of powerful. Kept strictly in black and white, it was beautifully solemn and somewhat disturbing (the Hannibal Lecter masks and demonic wigs!). The way she shredded lace and tweed for her jackets is beyond words; the flower-imitating knots and draped coats are as poetic as ever. READ MY FULL REVIEW HERE.

ED’s SELECTION:


Comme Des Garçons Flap Pocket Wool-Blend Blazer



Comme Des Garçons x PHILEO Melted Derby Shoes



Comme Des Garçons Checked Wool Jacket

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Radical Uniform. Rick Owens AW26

Rick Owens’s latest collection? Hard as ice-cold metal, raw as Kim Gordon’s newest song, emotionally explosive like a Lynne Ramsay film – yet, at the same time, utterly and devastatingly beautiful. This season, the designer was invested in the idea of uniforms: they command presence and provoke threat, but once mocked, they can easily tip into something almost hilarious. It was therefore intriguing to see how Owens reimagined hyper-masculine utilitarianism within his twisted universe, where darkness functions as the true source of light.

The athletic models appeared even more otherworldly in elongated, skin-tight silhouettes, ornamented with floor-sweeping tentacles, razor-sharp shoulder pads, and origami-like constructions that quite literally enveloped the wearer. Color-washed, cropped gothic cashmere coats took on a grunge edge when paired with stone-washed pants, while Rick’s signature high-platform boots pushed each look into even more extreme, radical territory. It’s a tough world out there, and Owens designs clothes that protect you – physically and mentally – from the harsh detriments of reality.

ED’s SELECTION:

Rick Owens Jumbo Tabard Silk-chiffon Turtleneck Blouse


Rick Owens x Dr. Martens 1460 Quad Sole Megalace Leather Ankle Boots


Rick Owens Triple Donut Convertible Cashmere Sweater


Rick Owens Cropped Bleached Brushed-cotton Bomber Jacket


Rick Owens Satin Wide-leg Cargo Pants

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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