pucci ss26 | passpartout

At Pucci, the season opened like a key turning in a lock. Presented at Palazzo Clerici in Milan, Camille Miceli’s ‘Passepartout’ collection revealed itself as a wardrobe of possibilities: dresses that shimmer and slip into night, velvet tailoring that sharpens the silhouette, and archive prints reimagined with irreverent energy.

The name Passepartout derives from an early-2000s Italian TV show where the late Philippe Daverio unlocked stories of art and culture. Miceli borrows the idea as a metaphor: Pucci as an “all-access key,” a wardrobe that moves with its wearer from gallery to nightclub, cocktail to swimming pool. “I can imagine a woman arriving to a gallery or a club,” Miceli explains. “Maybe she buys a Picasso, maybe she dances all night. This season, I really wanted to channel the impression that wearing Pucci opens doors – the feeling that anything is possible.” 

And indeed there was a fluidity in how the collection moved between day and night. Miceli channels this with prints pulled from the Pucci archive, such as Labirinto, Istrice, Collane, Volute, Astro and Hawaii, that appear stretched, spliced and recoloured to pulse with new life. A slinky lurex jersey dress gleamed like liquid light, while a Labirinto sweater dress balanced graphic sharpness with body-skimming ease. Gauzy chiffons flickered with transparency, layered to catch the light in movement. Tailored velvet suits hugged close to the body, cut lean and precise but never stiff. Jacquards in vivid yarns and patterned knits carried Pucci’s geometry into cooler months, while scarf dresses with grosgrain straps swung with club-ready attitude.

The palette unfolded in chapters, beginning with hot bursts of black and gold giving way to softer greys, pinks and purples, before plunging into poolside turquoise terry for the finale. Along the way, volumes shifted: generous coats, elongated silhouettes, and barely-there minis all found space in the same story.

Accessories follow Pucci’s maximalist rulebook. Marmo bags catch the light in matte and gloss; thigh-high boots come with chain-adorned heels; jewellery morphs from chunky chains to sculptural horns. Hand-crafted leather flowers act as brooches, charms, or belts, layering possibility upon possibility. Even the lifestyle pieces – umbrellas, jewellery boxes, a Pucci-hued neck pillow – play up the idea of travel and movement, expanding the brand’s codes beyond the wardrobe.

Only after the clothes had made their entrance did Pucci reveal the face of the season: Naomi Campbell. Shot by Oliver Hadlee Pearch, the campaign places her beneath flashing club lights, mouthing the name Pucci as sequins and lurex shimmer around her. 

Like Daverio’s programme, this collection thrives on connection – this time between art and nightlife. With Campbell embodying its spirit, Pucci makes the case that glamour is at its best when it’s a passageway, never a dead end.

Discover the collection here.

photography. courtesy of Pucci, Oliver Hadlee Pearch
words. Gennaro Costanzo