Schiaparelli Haute Couture Spring 2026 Collection
Daniel Roseberry’s Spring 2026 haute couture collection for Schiaparelli arrived with a literal sting. Opening the show was a monumental scorpion tail—an unmistakable signal that this would be the house’s most confrontational, sculptural outing yet.






Inspired by nature’s apex predators, Roseberry pushed couture into feral territory, using trompe-l’œil and extreme construction to evoke alligator tails, horns, spines, and vast wings erupting from the backs of jackets and gowns. These protrusions didn’t merely decorate the garments; they redefined the silhouette, mimicking flight, defense, and attack.
The effect was hypnotic and unsettling. A sheer black lace jacket curved into a colossal scorpion tail bristling with silver needles, while a translucent skirt suit embroidered with crystals exploded into organza spikes reminiscent of a pufferfish in self-defense. The collection thrived on tension—beauty edged with threat.






The finale heightened that ambiguity. Models Awar Odhiang and Lulu Tenney emerged in multicolored feathered jackets punctuated by two massive beaks projecting from chest and back. Were they birds of paradise or birds of prey? “That uncertainty is the point,” Roseberry said backstage. “There’s something aggressive and powerful in the silhouette.”






His references spanned high and low, sacred and cinematic: Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel, Ridley Scott’s Alien, and the poetry of David Whyte. One line, in particular, framed the emotional core of the collection—anger not as destruction, but as a form of compassion. Against a backdrop of global instability, Roseberry chose to channel unrest into creation.

The craftsmanship matched the intensity of the vision. A tiered gala gown shimmering with 65,000 raw silk feathers in black and kingfisher blue demanded more than 8,000 hours of work. A bustier dress adorned with hundreds of tiny shells and a suspended pearl took 4,000. These were feats of patience as much as imagination.
Not every look carried venom. Sculpted bustier gowns with crystal fringe felt destined for the Oscars, while inverted and slashed tulle ball gowns nodded toward couture surrealism, echoing the spirit of Viktor & Rolf. The collection oscillated between menace and elegance, never settling into one mood for long.

