Balenciaga Fall 2026 Couture Collection
Pierpaolo Piccioli made a confident haute couture debut at Balenciaga, introducing a vision built on bold color, architectural silhouettes, and emotional elegance. Rather than distancing himself from Cristóbal Balenciaga’s legacy, the Italian designer embraced the founder’s fascination with volume, precision, and sculptural form, while infusing the house with his unmistakable sense of romance.
Presented in the serene courtyard of the Cité Internationale Universitaire de Paris, the collection revealed Piccioli’s instinctive approach to couture. His philosophy centered on engineering shape through expert cutting rather than excessive construction, allowing fabric, color, and silhouette to merge into fluid, seemingly effortless forms.






That approach produced gowns of remarkable lightness despite their dramatic scale. One of the collection’s defining creations featured more than 24,000 gazar petals, demonstrating the extraordinary craftsmanship hidden beneath its ethereal appearance. Throughout the show, maximalist surfaces contrasted with restrained silhouettes, creating garments that felt simultaneously monumental and refined.






Texture became one of the collection’s strongest visual languages. Plush wide-leg trousers, tubular embroidery, and silky fibers emerging beneath luxurious cashmere coats added richness without overwhelming the purity of the silhouettes.
Piccioli also explored the intersection of tailoring and fluidity. A deceptively simple black T-shirt dress paired a fully structured couture bodice with a freely draped skirt, while eveningwear pushed the concept further through sculptural bustier gowns that dissolved into cascading pleated chiffon.
Outerwear proved equally compelling. Cashmere and leather coats were molded by hand directly onto couture mannequins, producing striking sculptural profiles, while oversized silk gazar bomber jackets with rounded sleeves and inflated backs offered a fresh interpretation of couture volume with undeniable desirability.



The finale embraced pure fantasy. Billowing gowns with topiary-inspired proportions and layered volumes culminated in Gigi Hadid wearing a dramatic rooster-feather hood that framed her face before enveloping her silhouette in movement and texture.
Daywear appeared only sparingly—floor-skimming chinos, couture tank tops, and elevated essentials—underscoring Piccioli’s conviction that haute couture should remain a space for imagination rather than practicality.

