Dior Spring 2026 Collection
“Do you dare step into… the House of Dior?”
With those words projected onto a monumental screen, Jonathan Anderson staged his debut as creative director of Dior womenswear—a provocation that set the tone for a show built on both rupture and reinvention.
Inside a vast tent at the Tuileries Gardens, the energy was electric. A gray marble runway supported an inverted pyramid that doubled as a screen, where filmmaker Adam Curtis stitched together Dior’s archival runway footage with Hammer horror, Hitchcock clips, and 1960s B-movies. In the finale, the images collapsed into a shoe box: the past symbolically consumed to clear space for the present.






Anderson explained that he wanted to acknowledge all his predecessors—from Christian Dior and Maria Grazia Chiuri to John Galliano, his personal gateway into the house—yet also step beyond them. “Fashion isn’t about being liked anymore; it’s fashionable now to destroy it,” he said, noting the immense pressure of steering LVMH’s crown jewel.
That tension between reverence and irreverence came alive in the clothes. The opening look, a white pleated dress suspended over invisible hoops in a lampshade silhouette, announced a vocabulary that was architectural, airy, and theatrical. Instead of reviving Dior’s A- or H-lines, Anderson invented his own, calling it a play of harmony and tension. The legendary Bar jacket returned, scaled down to doll-like proportions.






He explored both volume and fragility: billowing dresses and skirts in gauzy lace and plush knits; pleated satin tops with stiff lace collars plunging down the back; and sheer negligees reinforced with cage-like frameworks. He even ventured into experimental knitwear with lumpy, sculptural dresses in the spirit of Rei Kawakubo.






Accessories sealed the statement. The Cigale bag, derived from an archival gown, is destined for instant cult status. Together with footwear designer Nina Christen, Anderson unveiled modern loafers alongside delicate mules topped with oversized floral rosettes, equal parts practical and performative.