saint laurent aw26 | giovanni’s room

Nobody was expecting it, and that is exactly why everyone was talking about it. Anthony Vaccarello slipped a surprise Saint Laurent show into the Paris Couture Week schedule, turning what had been a subdued moment in the fashion calendar into an instant appointment to watch. Guests were greeted with an unusual first impression: furry wallets handed out as invitations, hinting at the textural surprises waiting inside.

Front-row chatter lived up to the buzz. While this season was billed around menswear, the crowd felt delightfully cross-genre. Faces ranged from the cast of ‘Heated Rivalry,’ including Connor Storrie, François Arnaud and Robbie Graham-Kuntz, alongside house legend Kate Moss, who all gathered to see how the designer would translate the emotional texture of transition into a wearable wardrobe.

Vaccarello built Autumn/Winter 2026 around a surprisingly intimate idea: the emotional texture of transition. The collection pulled from James Baldwin’s 1956 novel ‘Giovanni’s Room,’ an exploration of self-discovery and vulnerability that sits well with Saint Laurent’s history of dressing identity and desire.

 

This was a wardrobe cast between private dusk and public dawn, featuring silhouettes that spoke with intent through long, lean lines that felt almost ritualised. Vaccarello chose to avoid unnecessary flourishes, instead focusing on a discipline of cut and proportion where the tailoring appeared to land on the body with a sense of inevitability. He describes the Saint Laurent ideal as a simplicity of silhouette, as though it were created with only a few pencil strokes.

Sharp shoulders were used to cloak the wearer’s uncertainty, while the signature smoking tuxedo was cut with such precision it felt like a protective shield against the world. One of the most daring pieces was a transparent, glossy trench coat that plays with the house trope of the morning after the night before, acting as a snapshot of human complexity by highlighting how we reveal and conceal ourselves.

Low-neckline knits peeked beneath tailored jackets, introducing a hint of softness against what might otherwise have felt like rigid structure. There were pinstripe patterns tucked into ensembles, appearing on shirts, suits and layered looks that felt both classic and modern at once. Furs appeared as considered accents, adorning collars trimmed with soft pelts or jackets backed with subtle hair.

Every look was anchored by high boots and a heavy commitment to black, which Vaccarello chose for its combination of classicism and rebellion, while also serving as a staple in Alexander Skarsgård’s wardrobe.

Black remained the heart colour of the Maison, chosen not for anonymity but for resonance. Pieces in deep chocolate and navy surfaced as well, but it was the classic noir undertone that gave the show its taut, focused feeling. This was a collection built on moments of truth, offering a thoughtful and sharply alive perspective on the ritual of dressing.

Discover the collection here.

photography. courtesy of Saint Laurent
words. Gennaro Costanzo