You knew something curious was afoot at Louis Vuitton when the invitation was not a card, but a pair of tan leather slippers. Pharrell Williams arrived with DROPHAUS, a prefabricated glass-and-wood sanctuary shipped to the Jardin d’Acclimatation in a freight crate. For a Maison of this scale, the Autumn/Winter 2026 show felt oddly intimate – a slightly conspiratorial look at futuristic dressing viewed through a retro, timeless lens.
Inside the timber box, designed by Pharrell alongside the architects at Not A Hotel, the Homework furniture served as an homage to the human savoir-faire. Models drifted through the rooms and the surrounding garden like inhabitants of a retro-futurist dream.

Pharrell’s idea of the future dandy wears a soft mock neck and a suit without ceremony, which is an unexpectedly radical thing to find on a Paris runway. The silhouettes were patient, built to outlast a single season’s headline. Tailoring kept its architecture but relaxed its posture. Jackets carried a looseness that suggested movement, not slouch; trousers folded and fell with a practical dignity.
The real alchemy, however, happened within the Timeless Textiles. The Studio Homme has been moonlighting as a laboratory: there were heritage houndstooths and herringbones that appeared entirely traditional until a camera flash hit them, revealing reflective yarns that turned the wearer into a beacon.
More surreal were the aluminium textiles: classic shirting and outerwear bonded with thin layers of aluminium, allowing the fabric to ‘remember’ the crinkles and gestures of the wearer’s body. There were also thermo-adaptive shells that regulate temperature in silk and chambray cuts. And LV Silk-Nylon, a hybrid of silk and recycled nylon, has a faint sheen that reads like leather from a distance but gives back the pliability of fabric when you move.

Pharrell loves a visual trick and trompe l’œil ran through the collection with a wink. What looked like a basic cotton T-shirt was actually woven from vicuña, the softest and rarest wool on Earth. Silk shells masqueraded as rugged nylon twill, and lumberjack shirts were meticulously laser-cut from printed flannel onto a mesh base.
Accessories delivered their own small revolutions. The Speedy P9 reappeared in glow-in-the-dark treatments and reversible forms, and the new LV Drop sneaker borrowed its sole from the idea of a water splash, sending ripples through an otherwise sober line-up.
Trunks and small objects picked up a retro-futurist mood: mini boombox bags and TV-shaped clutches felt like jokes that also meant business. Footwear ranged from sturdy, almost military boots to a Goodyear-stitched monk that looks hard-wearing yet surprisingly nimble.
Pharrell did not let the show be only visual. A garden-scented perfume by Jacques Cavallier Belletrud threaded through the space, and the soundtrack, crafted in Louis Vuitton’s studios, caught everyone by surprise with unreleased pieces from John Legend, A$AP Rocky, Quavo and Jackson Wang.
Louis Vuitton is proposing a blueprint for permanence. It is a version of futurism without alienation, designed for the home, the street and the inevitable tomorrow.
Discover the collection here.
photography. courtesy of Louis Vuitton
words. Gennaro Costanzo










































































































































































































































































