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Johanna Ortiz Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Johanna Ortiz Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

The Río Magdalena, Colombia’s majestic river, flows northward through the country’s western half, carrying centuries of history, from pre-Columbian cultures to Spanish colonization. Named after Mary Magdalene, it remains a powerful symbol of the nation’s spirit and continuity. Johanna Ortiz drew from this legacy for her spring collection, called Magdalena, an homage to her Colombian roots.

Her most tangible gesture of support for Colombia’s heritage lies in her ongoing commitment to local craftsmanship and artisanal culture. At her Cali atelier—founded to employ and empower regional talent—around 480 artisans, 78% of them women, bring her designs to life. The atelier also houses a school where traditional techniques are taught and preserved. While silks and jerseys are sourced from Italy, every piece is entirely crafted in-house, grounding Ortiz’s vision in the authenticity of Colombian handwork.

This season, her prints echoed the lush textures of tropical landscapes. Earthy, sun-warmed tones defined sporty cropped jackets worn over her signature long, fluid dresses cinched with high-waisted corset belts woven from natural fibers; languid silhouettes were often layered under matching shawls or shimmering with sequined panels. Ortiz also infused personal memories into the styling with pieces from her private collection of mochila bags—traditional basket designs meticulously handmade by the Kankuamo community of the Sierra Nevada. “I really relate to the river at this point in my life,” said Ortiz. “Sometimes we keep circling back, pushing ourselves a little too hard. But right now, I’m learning to let things flow. This collection reflects that moment—living one day at a time, allowing each new day to bring its own adventure and magic.”

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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Chanel Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear
Fashion

Chanel Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Chanel Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Ludovic de Saint Sernin Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear
Fashion

Ludovic de Saint Sernin Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Ludovic de Saint Sernin Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Akris Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear
Fashion

Akris Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Akris Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Valentino Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Valentino Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

The invitation to Alessandro Michele’s Valentino show was a package of glow-in-the-dark fireflies, the kind used for fishing. It was apropos the manifesto the designer penned for the show, which was about a letter the Italian director Pier Paolo Pasolini wrote in 1941, when he was still a student, on the subject of fireflies. According to Michele’s interpretation, for Pasolini, the glowing bugs represented “glimmers so elusive to survive the darkness of the ruling fascism.”

Not enough designers have wrestled with the desperate state of things this season. It’s safer not to ruffle feathers in either direction, no doubt. The problem with this approach is that fashion risks looking increasingly out of touch. The world is on the brink and we’re contemplating hemlines? Michele is one of the fireflies, or at least sees himself that way, and so he shared his opinion—not just in printed form, as he usually does, but via a spoken word performance by Pamela Anderson at the start of the show. “In this very dark moment we have to not turn off the light,” he said, putting it plainly during a meeting at his Place Vendôme office.

Fireflies, like butterflies, have a chrysalis stage, and you could say Michele has emerged from one his own. He’s been the subject of some online critique since arriving at Valentino, the complaints being that his clothes haven’t changed enough at his new job. This collection felt like a shedding of some of his old ways. “I tried to simplify,” he said, “but it’s my way of being simple.”

It was clear from the first look: a gathered peacock blue blouse with bows at the collar and hem accompanied by chartreuse satin pants with hems pulled snug around the heels of the model’s shoes. A blouse and trousers, a blouse and a pencil skirt—that was the basic formula. He simply mixed up the colors, the prints, and the fabrics, from chiffon and georgette to velvet and suede.

“Probably when I came at the beginning, I threw myself into this big thing,” he said. “Now it’s like I’m selecting.”
Michele still loves a sequin for evening, but his most persuasive gowns featured not a one. They came solid-colored in sapphire blue or ruby red, with asymmetric draping, or in black and white tuxedo detailing with a sheer train. The show ended with the models gathered in the center of the square space, gazing up at a light show designed to evoke the pulsing of synchronous fireflies in what was one of the most memorable and moving visuals of the week. “It’s the time to push more and more,” Michele said, “to make people dream, to try to escape, not just from reality, but from the idea that you can do nothing.”

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Ottolinger Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear
Fashion

Ottolinger Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear

by jummy84 October 5, 2025
written by jummy84

Ottolinger Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear

October 5, 2025 0 comments
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Lacoste Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear
Fashion

Lacoste Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear

by jummy84 October 5, 2025
written by jummy84

Lacoste Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear

October 5, 2025 0 comments
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Polo Ralph Lauren Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Polo Ralph Lauren Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 October 5, 2025
written by jummy84

This afternoon’s Polo presentation was held in a swanky apartment five minutes behind Madeleine. Inside, the hunky waitstaff in all-white Polo duds was serving madeleine cakes. I availed and was startled to discover that the cake’s first impact on my taste buds was…salty. Both odd and familiar, it tasted delicious. Proust would have been appalled. Yet that salty cake encapsulated the challenge facing Polo’s design team every season: how to formulate a new batch of clothing that stays true to the brand lexicon yet hits different enough to provoke a fresh appetite.

This time around, Polo found its answer in Jamaica, a locale it rigged at the center of a seasonal story based around Ricky Lauren and her many visits there with Ralph. As he wrote in his 2007 memoir: “I didn’t like the girl with all the makeup and high heels. I liked the girl in jeans and a white shirt with rolled-up sleeves, wearing her boyfriend’s jacket. That’s the girl I’m attracted to. That’s the girl I married—Ricky.”

That pragmatic eclecticism was reflected in the static-model styling of a collection that ranged across plenty of Polo tropes. Khaki three-piece tailoring with country details came garnished with paisley tie– print scarves and loose-cinched big-buckle belts. That white shirt was here, this time worn outside a fringed leather skirt above yellow sand shoes. A green madras dress with a diamond panel at the midriff was cut in silk and worn with pony-logo flip-flops. There was a series of full-leg tapered pants with a panel of material that looped from outside of the right angle up and across to the belt buckle, like half-fashioned and inverted Thai fisherman’s pants.

Heaped beads, a vintage Polo Sport surf-style logo T-shirt, and sarongs in tie-dye and paisley ramped up the beachiness a bit. A Polo cable knit that came stitched to a full-length skirt was the collection’s boldest salty madeleine. Printed cotton gardening gloves and a green-edged white cable cardigan styled like a jaunty cape above a wide-check linen shirt were other delicately applied adjustments to the classic Polo recipe.

October 5, 2025 0 comments
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August Barron Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

August Barron Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 October 5, 2025
written by jummy84

The spring season found LVMH Prize finalists Benjamin Barron and Bror August Vestbø showing their broadest and most sophisticated collection yet under a new name, August Barron. As usual, they were attuned to the most piquant vibrations in pop culture, the ones that speak directly to their millennial cohorts (but not only to them).

Maybe it’s a case of reality being too close to fiction, but given the outpouring of despair over the death of David Lynch, one would have expected more references to his twisted universe this season, but no. On the strength of August Barron’s Real Housewives collection, maybe one is enough, however. Playing on the eye-roll inducing title, the duo subverted the idea of the suburban matron, presenting a character who, in her petticoated circle skirts, cardigans, and lace-trimmed slips, has more in common with Belle de Jour’s Séverine Serizy than Teresa Giudice or TikTok’s trad wife. Elements of her backstory were abstracted from vintage magazines the designers found in Japan depicting housewives in bondage. There were these images, explained Barron, of “women with their clothing suspended or almost as if it was being taken off the body, and we were interested in trying to translate that idea of these perfect moments of undress getting frozen.” To that end, multi-layered cardigans (a new knitwear option) designed to stay unbuttoned revealed peeks of bras, “display” shirts allowed glimpses of décolletage, jeans had leg-revealing side zips, aprons were suspended from bras, slips looked like they were sliding off the body, and skirts didn’t fasten. Expanding on their collaboration with Guess, this time for pieces that will go into production, there was also a skewed and gravity defying denim mini.

Like that perpetually animated skirt, dreams are something that cannot be tethered, and the sense of constraint and release in the collection was also informed by films like Girl Interrupted, and The Virgin Suicides. In addition, princess movies (Cinderella, Alice in Wonderland) and Grey Gardens contributed to the unabashed prettiness and confident defiance the collection communicated.

Playing with the idea of interiors, the housewife’s domain, some of the dresses were made from tablecloths, and plastic, referencing furniture protectors, was worked into some of the pieces. The designers played with the matchy-matchy aesthetic of the ’50s, and decorative buttons and brooches also referenced that era. Barron and Vestbø didn’t abandon their starting idea of bondage, but they sugarcoated it into something sweet, showing shiny jeweled straps with creamy pearls the size of gobstoppers. The collection’s pièces de résistance were the delicious “let them eat cake” triple ball gowns that were belted (another reference to bondage) to the body.

The show, with its living room set complete with an ironing board, was presented in a Paris club—about as far from suburbia as you can get. As such it was prime AB. This collection, Barron said, was about the “idea of constructive perfection… this constant work on an image that’s for other people mostly.” By physically deconstructing their work, exposing the seams and what lies beneath, the designers championed individuality and celebrated the perfection that is to be found in imperfection, which is, essentially, the human condition.

October 5, 2025 0 comments
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Melitta Baumeister Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Melitta Baumeister Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Unlike Kate Bush, Melitta Baumeister is not “runnin’ up that hill.” With a 2023 CFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund under her belt, and as the recipient of this year’s National Design Award from the Cooper Hewitt, you could say she’s at the top of it. Not that she’d rest on her laurels. Baumeister is a designer in seemingly perpetual motion; you can see her riding a bicycle in her signature black dress and cap through the streets of New York. Her avatar has also recently taken up residence at Dover Street Market in Paris, giving the illusion that she can be in two places at once.

The two things that Baumeister wanted to bring together for spring were fashion and sport. On a call, the designer explained that she had been “working on sculptural shapes for movement…because we have a running shoe collab coming up.” This partnership is the first Nike has done with a performance sneaker. The tagline for this project, which will be released at the end of the month, is “Run Like No One Is Watching,” which explains the eye embroidery on some of the cotton pieces in the collection. Baumeister, who only recently started going on runs, said she has the feeling of being observed when working out. “I feel like a lot of people who love fashion maybe present themselves more from a fashion perspective…you want to identify yourself more with your clothing identity or fashion identity.”

The shapes in this collection will be familiar to those who have been following the brand, as will the sweatsuit, which has been part of the repertoire for many years now. The double layers in a shirt and the double printing on a denim set were intended to capture a bit of the blur of an object in movement. The pieces with what look like linebacker shoulders (and which were stuffed with tulle) actually referenced an Erwin Wurm sculpture of a top-heavy body on skinny legs. Although some looks were styled with leggings, this collection was created not so much for jogging but for the kind of running around that city people do. You might even call these designs rather dashing.

October 4, 2025 0 comments
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