Givenchy Fall 2026 Collection
For Fall 2026, Sarah Burton delivered her most expansive statement yet for Givenchy—a collection that explored the emotional and aesthetic complexity of being a woman today.
Set within a darkened runway designed like a giant zoetrope, the show unfolded with cinematic precision. Each model emerged gradually from shadow, turning every look into a revelation and focusing attention on the individuality of the clothes—and the women wearing them.






Burton orchestrated a rich mix of materials with quiet authority: velvet, animal prints, kimono silks, lace, hammered silver embellishments, and wild-textured furs. What might have felt excessive elsewhere instead read as deliberate and deeply personal. Her Givenchy, increasingly centered on the female experience, embraced contrast—strength and vulnerability, restraint and opulence.
The opening moment was unforgettable. Eva Herzigová strode down the runway in a commanding tuxedo layered beneath an oversized masculine coat, setting the tone for a collection that balanced power dressing with sensuality.






Tailoring remained the foundation: sharply cut Spencer jackets with nipped waists and peplums, precise black suits, and leather skirts stripped to their essence. But Burton countered that discipline with expressive pieces, including a breathtaking dress worn by Mona Tougaard—painted, embroidered, frayed, and fringed until it resembled a Flemish floral painting brought to life.






Several models appeared like figures from Northern European masterworks, their presence amplified by sculptural headscarves created by milliner Stephen Jones. Twisted from simple jersey, the pieces evoked the quiet intimacy of portraits by Johannes Vermeer.
Burton framed the collection as an exploration of emotional multiplicity. Clothing became a means of navigating those layers: the enveloping comfort of a deep-blue shearling coat cinched at the waist; the sharp elegance of structured black tailoring; the playful seduction of a knit top dotted with oversized pom-poms; the simplicity of a leather skirt or angled velvet slip dress. A sweeping emerald satin cape draped across the shoulder of Alex Consani closed the show with theatrical grace.
Personal history also entered the narrative. Burton incorporated fragments of her own creative journey—a worn vintage kimono she bought upon arriving in Paris in 2024 and a yellow jacquard revived from the archives of Alexander McQueen, her longtime collaborator before his death in 2010.

