Stella McCartney Spring 2026 Collection
No one stages fashion quite like Stella McCartney. This season, guests found a copy of The Stella Times waiting at every seat—a self-declared collector’s item laying out her manifesto, “Come Together,” inspired by the legendary Beatles track. For McCartney, the idea was to merge her wardrobe codes, the people she cherishes, and the cutting-edge innovations that define her brand’s future.






The spectacle unfolded outside the Centre Pompidou, where fans craned their necks as arrivals turned into a red-carpet moment. Robin Wright, Jenna Coleman, Ice Spice, and even Woody Harrelson graced the scene, but the most unexpected cameo came from Helen Mirren. Before the first model appeared, the Oscar-winning actress took the runway to recite the lyrics of Come Together as a dramatic monologue. At times whimsical without Paul McCartney’s thundering bassline, it set a theatrical stage.
The collection itself was an exploration of bold silhouettes and radical proportions. Shoulders jutted outward, waists cinched tight, and hems ballooned into sweeping volumes. McCartney reimagined her signature masculine tailoring with corseted structures and sculptural shoulders, while playful skater dresses expanded with hoop skirts. Some pieces bordered on impractical—like a blue-embroidered babydoll paired with a red crochet tutu so wide it could hardly fit through a doorway. Yet in Paris, land of Marie Antoinette, panniers and petticoats suddenly felt right at home.






For those seeking ease and understatement, the designer offered sleek fitted dresses in vibrant hues with front slits, as well as a flawless white bandage mini that hugged the body without overwhelming it.
Fabric innovation, McCartney’s calling card, took center stage. A lavender gown and bubblegum-pink bodysuit appeared feathered, but were in fact crafted from painted blades of grass, encircling the models in cloud-like textures. “I’d rather pull grass than pluck feathers,” she quipped, underscoring her eco-conscious ethos. Birds were celebrated differently too, with ballooning oversize blouses in aqua, cream, and baby pink.






Eveningwear delivered drama with purpose: a strapless gown encrusted with shimmering purple sequins, made of recycled plastics, bio-based resins, and lab-grown seaweed, stood out as the triumph of the night. Other attempts—stiff corseted gowns with armor-like bodices—fell short, but the overall message of sustainability meets spectacle rang clear.