Armani Privé Spring 2026 Haute Couture Collection
With Giorgio Armani’s passing, Armani Privé enters a new chapter under the quiet authority of his niece, Silvana Armani—and for Spring 2026, she set the tone with jade. The stone became both color story and statement, signaling continuity with the founder’s codes while asserting a personal, pragmatic vision.
Gone were the ornamental flourishes Giorgio occasionally indulged, notably the hats. In their place: a tightly edited 60-look collection built around fluid tailoring, relaxed proportions, and an emphasis on wearability. Silvana Armani made her priorities clear—couture that honors the house’s mastery of daywear as much as its red-carpet legacy.






The show opened with menswear-inflected tailoring, a cornerstone of the Armani vocabulary. Palazzo trousers in silk cady featured up to ten pleats per side, paired with softened jackets stripped of stiffness and, at times, lapels altogether. Their edges shimmered subtly with tubular glass beads. Organza shirts, ties, and small round glasses completed the look, lending an intellectual ease that felt unmistakably Armani.
That nonchalance carried through shimmering mesh knits and midi tunics—proof that couture knitting is having a moment this season. Eveningwear remained restrained in silhouette, relying on cut rather than spectacle, though crystals and open backs ensured sensuality was never far away. Jade’s cultural ties surfaced in embroidery motifs of lanterns and bamboo fans, rendered with discretion rather than excess.



The collection may have lacked overt drama or a strong narrative arc, but it compensated with clarity, comfort, and an elegance rooted in discipline. Its conservative charm felt intentional—an affirmation of Armani’s enduring appeal in a moment of industry flux.

The final note was quietly poignant. The bridal look, traditionally a new creation, was instead a black gown designed by Giorgio Armani for Fall 2025, veil intact. It was a graceful tribute. Silvana Armani emerged to bow in navy, composed and assured, carrying forward a legacy not by reinvention, but by refinement.

