Givenchy Spring 2026 Collection
For her second collection at Givenchy, Sarah Burton explored what it means to express powerful femininity without relying on the traditional language of masculinity — no boxy shoulders, no rigid suits, no armor. Instead, she let a quiet, simmering sensuality seep into the seams of her tailoring and the airiness of her dresses.






Transparency became her tool of seduction. She played with sheer fabrics, detachable necklines, abbreviated hems, and soft, sculptural bras that revealed as much strength as they did skin. It was an exercise in restraint — provocative yet poised, never loud, always deliberate.
“The world feels so noisy,” Burton reflected earlier in the week from her Paris studio. “I wanted the clothes to remain minimal, so there’s clarity in how a woman dresses. She isn’t overwhelmed.”
While the British designer has yet to present a haute couture collection for Givenchy — she’s reportedly still building her atelier teams — her mastery of cut was undeniable. She lengthened and curved the collar of a crisp white shirt to expose the chest like a sculpture in motion, elegantly framing Eva Herzigova’s décolletage and a single jeweled necklace. A tailored midi skirt, sliced to perfection, became unexpectedly erotic when worn by Mariacarla Boscono, its simplicity transformed into allure.






That balance — the woman first, the clothes second — is Burton’s quiet genius. Even when fabric was scarce or silhouettes revealing, dignity prevailed. Naomi Campbell embodied that ethos in a sharply tailored black suit worn open, her sculpted abs gleaming under the runway lights.
“Women want to feel sexy,” Burton said simply. “They want to embrace their bodies. They want to feel extraordinary — and that, to me, is power.”


She revisited and refined the hourglass tailoring of her debut, allowing jackets to slip off the shoulders, almost as if undressing themselves. Her signature fish-tail knit dresses, once dramatic for fall, reappeared as lean columns wrapped in oversized tulle flounces — a fabric affectionately called Paris net.