The best shows of Paris Fashion Week Men’s A/W 2026

The best shows of Paris Fashion Week Men’s A/W 2026

Following a palpably quieter Pitti Uomo and Milan Fashion Week Men’s, Paris is dialling up the energy with a busy few days to close out the A/W 2026 men’s season. Starting strong on Tuesday evening, proceedings got underway with a resolutely beautiful show from Auralee and a house party of sorts at Louis Vuitton, where Pharrell erected a contemporary home with glass walls, furniture and a lawn (made in collaboration with Shinji Hamauzu’s Tokyo-based architecture firm Not a Hotel) inside the brand’s foundation. Another blockbuster display followed at the Musée Rodin on Wednesday, where Jonathan Anderson presented his sophomore men’s collection for Dior. The Irish designer looked to couturier Paul Poiret for a collection which reworked codes of ‘history and affluence’, cementing his eclectic, reference-rich vision for the house.

As for the rest of the week, there’s a mixture of new beginnings and momentous goodbyes. Joining the calendar for the first time is Bologna-based Magliano, who will present his Paris debut among mainstays Rick Owens, Comme des Garçons, Dries Van Noten, Issey Miyake and Sacai. Closing out the week will be an undoubtedly emotional swansong from Véronique Nichanian on Saturday, who hands her 37-year position at the helm of Hermès men’s to Grace Wales Bonner. The London-based designer will present her debut for the heritage Parisian house in January next year.

IM Men

IM Men at Paris Fashion Week Men’s A/W 2026

(Image credit: Courtesy of Issey Miyake)

The vaulted nave of Collège des Bernardins, a 13th-century Cistercian school, provided an atmospheric backdrop for IM Men’s third show in Paris, which was titled ‘Formless Forms’ (the Issey Miyake brand replaced Issey Miyake Homme Plissé on the schedule). Designers Sen Kawahara, Yuki Itakura and Nobutaka Kobayashi said that this season they were imagining those moments at the ‘seam of a day’, dawn and dusk, moving from the opening looks in black and white towards a kaleidoscopic finale (a section in optic white was interspersed between). ‘Moments when something begins, and when something ends,’ they elaborated.

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