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Rosie Assoulin Resort 2026 Collection
Rosie Assoulin Resort 2026 Collection

Vogue

timea day ago

  • Entertainment
  • Vogue

Rosie Assoulin Resort 2026 Collection

Rosie Assoulin isn't trying to make your everyday wardrobe. 'They're little special moments,' she said of her resort 2026 offering—a mixture of playful prints, lively colors, and couture-inspired structure with sporty flourishes. 'It doesn't feel wasteful to me because there's that great white summer dress that you pull out every season. No matter what, it's getting worn. It could be 12 years old and it still feels fresh every time.' Assoulin is interested in creating clothing for occasions, be it a dinner party or a vacation. 'I want to feel great every day. They're precious few days that you get to take a trip,' she said. 'We want to create the wardrobe for that.' That's not to say the collection isn't versatile. From tops with convertible drapery to a maxi dress with a removable bustle (in both pink plaid and butter yellow colorways), Assoulin reminds us that just because her clothing may not be for everyday use doesn't mean it can't be reworn again and again. 'Not every occasion calls for a removable bustle, so why not have the option?' she said. While she has no shortage of occasionwear, there are also plenty of statement pieces for more casual moments. Much of her offering mixes sport and craft, from pants made of a floral upholstery-inspired fabric to the stem-green shorts with yellow accents. Even the yellow spongy crepe maxi dress with a scalloped drop waist is inspired by a vintage swimsuit. In limiting her output to two collections a year, Assoulin is challenging herself to edit. (Much of her excess creativity is diverted to her pottery habit, her bright yellow vases dot her showroom.) With this collection, she proves that maximalism can be done with restraint.

Gabriele Colangelo Resort 2026: Seeking Lightness, Finding Cowries
Gabriele Colangelo Resort 2026: Seeking Lightness, Finding Cowries

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Gabriele Colangelo Resort 2026: Seeking Lightness, Finding Cowries

Gabriele Colangelo found in a specific species of cowrie his lucky charm for the resort 2026 collection. Recalling a snake's head, the Cypraea caputserpentis type of the seashell and its dotted pattern were reworked into the only print Colangelo introduced in his sleek lineup. While cowrie-shaped jewelry and pendants swinging from leather straps doubling as belts punctuated some looks, the black-and-white animal print splashed over sheer turtlenecks and cotton trenchcoats injected a refreshing, edgy spin into his clean fashions in solid colors. More from WWD Lindsey Wixson Stars in Taller Marmo's 'Odyssey' Campaign Spring Studios Expands Publication, Platform Celebrating Fresh Talent With New, Itinerant Exhibit Mikey Madison Marked the Opening of Tiffany & Co.'s Largest Store in Europe Overall, Colangelo's quest this season was to offer a more relaxed take on his sharply tailored world. Hence he looked into more lightweight fabrications and turned sartorial tropes into hybrids. For example, a blazer jacket morphed into a shirt construction in its sleeves and paired wool on the front with a viscose panel on the back for a looser fit, while a crisp shirt took a cape-like silhouette via strategic openings under its batwing sleeves. The utility inflections that are recurrent in Colangelo's work also popped up in snap buttons dotting outerwear and functional tweaks, such as detachable parts conceived to hand customization power to his women and make his pieces even more versatile. Elsewhere, the designer continued to experiment with fabrics in laced inserts mixing cotton, nylon and viscose threads to create a subtle chromatic interplay, as well as in a jacquard vest weaving cotton and raffia threads in the upper part and ending in a swishing raffia fringing that is sure to grab attention. Not everything clicked perfectly. Colangelo's most daring introduction was an asymmetric skirt — half long, half short or half pleated, half not — to be layered over pants, but that felt a tad too gimmicky. A spaghetti-strap dress incorporating such a partition into its minimal shape was a more convincing way to deliver the concept. Launch Gallery: Gabriele Colangelo Resort 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection Best of WWD Windowsen RTW Spring 2022 Louis Shengtao Chen RTW Spring 2022 Vegan Fashion Week Returns to L.A. With Nous Etudions, Vegan Tiger on the Runway

By Malene Birger Resort 2026 Collection
By Malene Birger Resort 2026 Collection

Vogue

time11-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Vogue

By Malene Birger Resort 2026 Collection

A scan of By Malene Birger's resort lookbook suggests that all is business as usual at the label, but that's not quite so; as brand director Barbara Gullstein said on a call, we should think of resort 2026 as a 'transitional season.' This is because Emilie Martinsen-Kønigsfeldt, the newly appointed creative director who also owns the brand, is settling in. In the lead up to this transition, Martinsen-Kønigsfeldt spent about a year working side-by-side with Maja Dixdotter, the previous creative director, who had created a strong but minimal bohemian aesthetic for BMB. Martinsen-Kønigsfeldt's use of double-face fabrics, fringe, and hide, along with her palette, continue in this vein. What's changed, explained Gullstein, is the framing of the work. The idea is that the nomad has returned from travels away. 'There has been a need of adapting the collection and making it a bit more wearable for that global woman who works and lives a real life,' Gullstein said, and it's 'these practical elements that play into how Emilie has approached this collection.' The way the lookbook is photographed and styled—still images in a white room with a lone piece of furniture—is suggestive of a sense of interiority and perhaps of stocktaking. If a burgundy leather suit is pure business, a dreamy pale pink cable-knit sweater and skirt set is most definitely hyggelig, i.e. cozy.

A.L.C. Resort 2026 Collection
A.L.C. Resort 2026 Collection

Vogue

time06-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Vogue

A.L.C. Resort 2026 Collection

Andrea Lieberman, like probably every other designer in the world, has tariffs on the brain. 'What you buy and what you put on needs to be meaningful,' she said. 'If you're going to put something in your closet now, it needs to feel special, but not so niche that you can't wear it all the time.' Lieberman's attempt to walk that line comes through in A.L.C.'s resort 2026 offering, a mixture of timeless pieces and festive holiday wear. While the sweetheart midi dress with an ostrich feather-trimmed neckline and the tuxedo-inspired boiler suit are splashy, the outerwear is the true star of the season. A leather bomber with a sloped, lightly cushioned shoulder contrasted with a nipped waist helps her avoid the curse of the costumey, overly padded shoulder. The same masculine-meets-feminine ethos guides her suiting, which pairs boxy blazers with slim-fitting flare trousers. Lieberman's pieces are often inspired by the lax lifestyle and earthy color palette of her California environment. The devastating Los Angeles fires gave her a new appreciation for her surroundings, as seen primarily through her color choices this season. The pale gray-blue that recurs throughout the collection in suiting, dresses, and skirts reminds her of the morning fog that rolls in over the Pacific; clay-colored separates and a green column dress also nod to the SoCal landscape. 'I have such a connection to California, especially that area that was so deeply impacted,' Lieberman says. 'A lot of that happened when we were putting together the color palette. I think it's so intuitive to get that beautiful color of the fog rolling in off of the water and the lusciousness of the green and the soil.'

Go Behind-the-Scenes at the Chanel Resort 2026 Show in Lake Como
Go Behind-the-Scenes at the Chanel Resort 2026 Show in Lake Como

Vogue Arabia

time14-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Vogue Arabia

Go Behind-the-Scenes at the Chanel Resort 2026 Show in Lake Como

Skip to main content Photographed by Acielle / StyleDuMonde Acielle Tanbetova is on the ground in the Italian paradise to capture the latest Chanel collection Summer is around the corner, which means fashion's resort shows are about to go into full swing. First up is Chanel, which descended on Villa d'Este on magical Lake Como in Italy with its latest collection. Vibrant striped knits, little peachy-pink dresses, and beach-ready raffia bags complemented the scenic locale. Any one of the hundreds of pieces that came down the runway would make your next nature outing a very chic one, indeed. Scroll through for Acielle Tanbetova's best behind-the-scenes moments from the French house's resort 2026 show. Article originally published on Vogue US

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