Unlock the Secrets Behind 2 Cities and 18 Jaw-Dropping Looks That Will Shape Your Wardrobe Next Season—Are You Ready to Transform Your Style?

Unlock the Secrets Behind 2 Cities and 18 Jaw-Dropping Looks That Will Shape Your Wardrobe Next Season—Are You Ready to Transform Your Style?

Ever wondered what it takes to orchestrate a fashion show that lasts just 10–15 minutes but sends ripples through an entire season? For the past month, designers in New York, London, Milan, and Paris have been grinding behind the scenes—building sets, casting models, and crafting invites that double as art pieces—to bring us a glimpse of the fall 2026 collections. But beyond the chaos and couture lies a fascinating blend of creative courage and storytelling, all condensed into one defining moment: the first look on the runway. This isn’t just about fabric and flair; it’s about setting the tone, sparking conversation, and sometimes challenging the very rules of fashion itself. So, what’s the secret language woven into these opening ensembles, and how do they forecast the vibes of tomorrow? Let’s dive in as the masterminds behind Milan and Paris’ most buzzed-about shows reveal the inspirations and meanings that frame their inaugural looks. LEARN MORE

Estimated read time6 min read

For the last four-plus weeks, designers and their teams in New York, London, Milan, and Paris have worked tirelessly to execute their fall 2026 runway shows. They’ve built sets, organized seating charts, cast the models, sent invites (some made into jewelry or leather bodices or mini chairs), and worked with hair and makeup artists as well as stylists to put forth a vision for dressing next season. It is a monumental effort undertaken at least twice a year, and in some cases more. Behind all of this logistical and physical effort, there is also an incredible amount of creative fortitude that goes into designing a collection and telegraphing a message or a vibe or an aesthetic through a single 10–15-minute show.

This month in Milan and Paris, there was a particular excitement surrounding the collections, not only because many of the creative directors were only on their second go-arounds, but also because there is a noticeable shift happening in fashion—a bend back toward sartorial freedom, experimentation, and radical glamour, even if it’s steeped in heritage. At Gucci, Demna turned it out for his official runway debut, offering a sexy and confident (some may add provocative and boundary-pushing) way forward for the brand. There were layers upon layers at Prada, and modern glamour at Ferragamo and Armani.

Later in Paris, Vaquera designers Patrick DiCaprio and Bryn Taubensee gestured to the future of their born-in-New York label, while McQueen’s Seán McGirr begged us to examine our relationship to performance in the digital age.

There was a deeper meaning to almost every great collection this season, and despite all of the sets, the vibes, the celebrities, and the show choreography, each designer’s idea was ultimately crystallized by a single look: the first to appear on the runway. This first look can define a collection, cement it, and communicate something bigger. It is, among the many important elements of any new collection, a defining thing—a starting point for a sartorial whole.

Below, designers who showed in Milan and Paris explain the meaning behind their first looks.

Marni

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Chloe Paredes / Next Management

“In the first three Marni collections, the color palette was brown, black, white, and grey; there were no prints, which we were really surprised to discover, and the first color came in 1995 with a little red floral, so that’s why this first look of the collection has this color palette. We really wanted the show to start from the roots, but also surprising, so it’s not a direct reference to the archive in a literal way, but in spirit. The Marni spirit is very particular.” —Merryl Rogge


Tod’s

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Liu Wen / The Society Management

“While working on this collection, I felt a strong need to return to the body. To think of clothes not as something that exposes, but as something that protects. A physical protection made of volume, weight, texture, and the way a garment moves with the body and supports it.” —Matteo Tamburini


Prada

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Julia Nobis / DNA Model Management

“It’s the idea of the complexity of layering … complexity, which exists in sentiment, in politics, in life, and that reflects in clothes. It’s about the necessity of changing for living all day. Different personalities, sentiments, sexualities, and this woman lives them together in a day or a life.” —Miuccia Prada


Moschino

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Lia Marie Mielke / Next Management

“The Fall 2026 collection for me is distinctly personal and all about my roots. It’s an homage to my childhood home, Argentina. The memories and recollection and nostalgia. The collection charts a journey from the urbanity of Buenos Aires through the countryside.” —Adrian Appiolaza


Giorgio Armani

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Lily Vander Meeden / Ford Models

“This look embodies my vision of the Armani woman: someone who is true to herself, yet with her vision fixed on uncharted horizons. She is a woman that dresses naturally, leaving room for spontaneity and rejecting contrived perfection. It is precisely this authenticity that reveals her charm and personality.” —Silvana Armani


Institution

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“In this collection, I’m sharing the story of my ancestors, the Azerbaijanis of Georgia, celebrating our centenary carpet-making traditions and their contributions to democracy and the independence of Muslim women in the Caucasus.” —Galib Gassanoff


Jil Sander

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Nyla Singleton / d’management

“When I think about ‘home’, I realize it’s never just a place—it’s a set of rules, traditions, and expectations. A fashion house has its own version of these, its own inherited codes. So I ask myself: what am I meant to bring into this home? What should be shed at the door? And who, exactly, is writing the rules we’re meant to follow?” —Simone Bellotti


Gucci

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Charlie Jones / The Lions Management

“It’s not easy always, but feeling attractive, feeling seductive, it’s part of being a human, it’s something that I want to put out there as something that we need, especially in the world in which we live right now. The beauty and love we see in ourselves are an important part of the show. It can be read as sex appeal, but there is much more to that, and it’s more about being good with yourself in general, not only your body. We told each of them [the models] to be themselves, but exaggerated to really not hide their personality and to really go for it to see what the limit is, to exaggerate who they are. It’s part of Gucci to celebrate yourself.” —Demna


Ferragamo

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Penelope Ternes / Women Management Milan

“The clothing of sailors offers a foundational motif: those who would go to sea to build better lives for their families. That’s something that both Salvatore and my own family experienced—he left his home in Italy for America before returning home, and my family moved from Trinidad and Jamaica to Manchester. They all crossed the water to discover new beginnings.” —Maximilian Davis


Diesel

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Mariana Goncalves / Elite Milan

“It’s about disruptive pieces that are pure Diesel. It’s all the pieces we love, but they are twisted and wrapped, and seemingly wrong yet so right. The opening look is a white jersey top that looks like it’s been thrown on wrongly, all twisted up. Actually, it’s a double-layer jersey, which holds the twist perfectly in place—it can never be straightened. There’s a whole series of pieces that follow this idea, like skirts that look rucked up, but are held that way, and there are little trompe l’oeil jumpsuits of destroyed T-shirts with twisted skirts wrapped into it.” —Glenn Martins


Max Mara

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Awar Odhiang / Fabbrica Milano

“Sage as a serpent and as graceful as a dove – that was the expression used to describe Matilde di Canossa in the first millennium, and it may just as well apply to the Max Mara woman in the third millennium.” —Ian Griffiths


Etro

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Luiza Perote / The Agency

“The first look draws from Etro’s more formal heritage, from the masculine world of uniforms. It features a tobacco‑colored coat borrowed from Corto Maltese—the ultimate traveler—worn over a textured cotton shirt and rust‑colored leather trousers. The Scottish tartan scarf, embellished with metal fringes, wraps around the hips like a belt in the front and like a martingale in the back, transforming itself into a new element of femininity.” —Marco Di Vincenzo


McQueen

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Bebe Parnell / Next Management

“The opening look establishes the collection’s core tension. We subverted the razor-sharp structural rigour of a tailored coat with the fluidity of an archival waterfall collar. That exterior is contrasted with a tactile, faux-feather knit—something textural and visceral against the skin. Not just an emphasis on form, but how the clothing feels against the body.” —Seán McGirr


Gabriela Hearst

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Lily Van der Meeden / Oui Management

“The first look is a cashmere lace. We’re the only people in the world who have perfected that technique. It’s 100% cashmere and lace, that’s why it has that weight, and the flowers are all South American flowers. It’s an illustration that we’ve been working on for a few seasons, and they’re the same flowers that closed the show in a deconstructed organza embroidery.” —Gabriela Hearst


Courrèges

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Reagan Lee / IMG Models

“The first look of the ‘24 hours in the life of a Courrèges woman’ is a simple, almost instinctive gesture: a white satin dress, reminding us of a sheet draped around the body, at the moment you get out of bed.” —Nicolas DiFelice


Vaquera

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MAYA

“Look one was our bride! Most collections end with a bride, and we thought, why not start with a bride and see what happens after the wedding? She represented both the past and future of Vaquera. The theatricality and strong conceptual nature of our early collections, and also an aesthetic shift towards our future.” —Bryn Taubensee and Patric DiCaprio


Isabel Marant

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ANGELINA KENDALL / Ford Models

“I chose Angelina to open the show most of all because she’s authentically herself. She enjoys living her life, being with friends, she’s bubbly, I feel she’s the IM girl. This look captures that authenticity. The distressed Denim with embroidery, the fluffy silk washed bomber, it’s about being cozy yet cool and chic.” – Kim Bekker


Dior

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