Valentino Pre-Fall 2026: A Return Marked by Restraint
Alessandro Michele’s Pre-Fall 2026 collection for Valentino reintroduces the Rockstud—but through a distinctly Michele lens. The house’s iconic hardware, long associated with Pierpaolo Piccioli and Maria Grazia Chiuri, now appears sharper and more architectural: think elongated square toes reinforced with metal caps and studs reimagined with sculptural precision.






Michele approached the Rockstud cautiously, allowing time to understand its significance within Valentino’s vocabulary before reshaping it. The motif’s roots in Roman architecture—the studs on ancient doors—offered the designer a tangible link to the house’s heritage, giving him permission to reinterpret rather than replicate.

The season’s imagery also signals a strategic shift toward accessories, evident in nearly fifty iterations of the new DeVain shoulder bag. Yet the most profound evolution lies in the clothing. Michele, known for maximalist exuberance, pivots toward a more reductive language. “I’m in a phase where absence feels decorative—like I’m creating the negative of my maximalism,” he explained. The result is a disciplined approach that reframes volume, texture, and proportion without abandoning his cinematic signature.






Silhouettes nod to the 1980s through saturated color-blocking, liquid silks, and assertive shoulders. Prints grounded in archival patterns keep the collection tethered to Valentino’s identity, while contrasting weights—lingerie-inspired slips layered under structured leather—create clear, readable looks. Essential tailoring appears in lightweight black-and-white tweed, crisp poplin shirting, linen suiting with scalloped edges, and a taffeta gingham skirt suit accented with a pleated front.



Eveningwear remains the lone arena where Michele allows himself full flourish. A dreamy cascade of tulle, embroidery, and sequins showcases the house’s couture discipline, providing a counterpoint to the season’s newfound restraint.

