Paris Men’s Fashion Week, January 2026, confirmed a return to substance. Across the capital, designers privileged longevity, emotional intelligence, and craftsmanship, redefining contemporary menswear through restraint rather than excess.
Louis Vuitton
Pharrell Williams continued refining Louis Vuitton menswear toward understated authority. Elongated silhouettes, muted palettes, and precise tailoring defined a collection rooted in confidence and discretion.


Dior
Jonathan Anderson’s Dior Men proposed a couture-informed masculinity. Architectural outerwear and hybrid silhouettes blurred ceremonial and casual codes, reinforcing Dior’s leadership in elevated construction.



Hermès
Hermès marked a historic farewell as Véronique Nichanian presented her final menswear collection after 38 years. Leather, silk knits, and timeless layering honored a legacy of quiet luxury and material mastery.


Issey Miyake
IM MEN by Issey Miyake delivered poetic restraint through modular garments, sculptural folds, and fabric-led transformation.


Amiri
Amiri infused Paris with West Coast glamour. Retro tailoring, velvet textures, and music-driven nostalgia balanced relaxed elegance with rock-and-roll attitude.



Dries Van Noten
Under Julian Klausner, Dries Van Noten refined its expressive identity through layered prints, rich textiles, and youthful proportions, honoring the house’s DNA while injecting renewed energy.



Willy Chavarria
Willy Chavarria delivered one of the season’s most emotionally charged shows. Julia Fox’s appearance on the runway amplified the collection’s message of identity, power, and collective presence.


Jacquemus
Closing the week, Jacquemus presented Le Palmier at the Musée Picasso. The final line-up—punctuated by a striking red dress and oversized black hat—cemented the show’s balance of sensuality, precision, and couture-level theatricality.




Stay tuned on FM24 for more Fashion Week news!


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