McQueen Fall 2026 Collection
For Fall 2026, Seán McGirr staged his most psychologically charged collection yet for Alexander McQueen—a show where immaculate glamour collided with unease.
Cinema was the starting point. McGirr, like the house’s founder Alexander McQueen, often builds collections through film references. This season, the mood drew heavily from the suspenseful visual language of Alfred Hitchcock, layered with the quiet dread of Safe by Todd Haynes, starring Julianne Moore. The designer summarized the collection in two words: perfection and paranoia.






The setting reinforced that tension. Designed by Tom Scutt, the runway unfolded behind flesh-pink curtains, accompanied by an eerie electronic score from A. G. Cook. The clothes balanced three themes: precise tailoring, the rebellious spirit of Carnaby Street, and hints of boudoir sensuality.
Single-hook jackets in ice-gray Mikado silk and crinkled jacquard echoed the house’s provocative past, particularly the 1996 “La Poupée” collection. Others featured rippling collars that continued into flared coats worn as ultra-short dresses. McGirr openly mines the archive, treating it as a living resource rather than a relic.






The house’s dramatic feather pieces—famously worn by Lady Gaga—reappeared as a trompe-l’oeil feather top created entirely through embroidery. McGirr’s fascination with armor translated into a silver sweater constructed from thousands of metal rings, resembling a knit version of chain mail.
Yet the designer grounds his vision in street culture. Mod knee-high boots, sharp miniskirts, and sculpted briefs-like silhouettes injected youthful defiance. One such look, worn by Brazilian model Marcele Dal Cortivo, emphasized the body’s contours with sculptural precision.






The show’s atmosphere leaned deliberately uncanny. Some models wore plastic masks, their hair styled in perfectly sculpted side-parted waves. Satin padded coats and layers of quilted organza and lace heightened the sense of hyperreal beauty—elegant yet unsettling.

