Balenciaga Pre-Fall 2026 Collection

Balenciaga Pre-Fall 2026 Collection

For his second collection at Balenciaga—and his first to fully articulate a menswear vision—Pierpaolo Piccioli set the house in motion. Pre-Fall 2026 delivers a confident fusion of sport, tailoring, and couture-minded volume, signaling continuity with Balenciaga’s past while decisively reframing its future.

Piccioli opened with a clear nod to history: a camel coat inspired by an unfinished prototype Cristóbal Balenciaga once made for himself. It’s a symbolic gesture—menswear at Balenciaga has always existed in fragments, formally entering the commercial fold only in 2004. Here, Piccioli establishes lineage without nostalgia, translating heritage into something fluid, wearable, and unmistakably modern.

The collection balances the house’s hype-driven codes—chunky sneakers, hoodies, tracksuits, logo tees—with Piccioli’s signature refinement. Sculptural leather coats, precise tailoring, and enveloping silhouettes elevate the sportswear vocabulary rather than dilute it. The result feels immediate and relevant, grounded in real life but sharpened by couture instincts.

Shot across Paris streets, the métro, and a sleek apartment outfitted with gym equipment, the lookbook reinforces Piccioli’s thesis: fashion should move with the body. Technical pieces—leggings, cropped tops, and streamlined bodysuits—are crafted from high-performance, moisture-wicking, antibacterial fabrics, some even finished with sequins resilient enough for yoga or a long run. A leather jacket is treated like a windbreaker; footwear follows suit, from a flexible ballet-style sneaker with a rubber sole to men’s loafers lined in Lycra for athletic comfort.

Comfort, Piccioli insists, is non-negotiable. That philosophy extends to the new Jet sneaker, ultralight and sport-ready despite its bold proportions. It’s a natural evolution for a designer who has worn Balenciaga sneakers since the Triple S era.

Couture references anchor the collection. Voluminous opera-coat shoulders reappear in bombers; oversized sailor coats with dramatic buttons echo Cristóbal’s sculptural language. Leather, used masterfully, creates architectural shapes without heavy internal structure—dramatic yet effortless. A 1967 Balenciaga couture look, featuring a cagoule over a riding helmet, inspired a modern reinterpretation finished with a baseball cap, aligning heritage with the season’s athletic mood.

Sarah Mitchell
Sarah Mitchell
Sarah Mitchell is American Fiamma’s news editor, working across fashion and beauty from US.

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