Gucci Pre-Fall 2026: The Runway That Never Was
Demna’s first pre-fall collection for Gucci sharpens his emerging vision for the house—a vision increasingly anchored in the seductive minimalism and razor-sharp attitude of Tom Ford’s Gucci. If nostalgia for the Ford era still burns bright, Demna is fanning the flame with intention.






Following the “La Famiglia” lookbook and the buzz around his short film The Tiger, the designer continues to probe the brand’s identity through what he calls the “Gucci Generation.” Pre-Fall 2026 refines his cast of archetypal characters and hints at the direction he will cement at his first runway show in Milan this February. While house codes from the ’70s—GG monograms, Web stripes—remain present, the gravitational pull is unmistakably toward Ford’s sleek sensuality.
Demna shot the lookbook himself, staging it in lighting that mirrors the white-hot spotlights of Gucci’s 1996 runway. Several looks echo archival Ford-era pieces, not as replicas but as renewed propositions. For Demna, that period was “visually symbolic” and formative to his understanding of fashion—a moment when style and persona fused with striking clarity.






The collection opens with a rose silk-faille suit, signaling a decisive shift toward body-skimming tailoring—a stark departure from the oversized silhouettes that defined much of his work at Balenciaga and Vetements. To recreate certain archival constructions, he even revisited original manufacturers, discovering how decades of technological change subtly reshape fabrics and finish.






Material research is central to the pre-fall story. Demna uses everything from canvas and refined suedes to silk-cashmere blends that soften his tailoring vocabulary. Track jackets become elevated airport attire; denim is laser-cut into seamless, minimalist pieces; devoré velvet appears in translucent trousers; and leather is cut into biker jackets traced with Web motifs or into dive-inspired ensembles with a provocative edge.





Even the most ’70s-inflected designs—pussy-bow blouses, pleated floral skirts, equestrian scarf-dresses—carry an undercurrent of sensuality through precise slits or fluid cuts. The bolder pieces amplify this tension: a leather-spliced leopard coat worn as outerwear or a dress, shimmering evening gowns, and feather-light coats that blend shearling, feathers, and muslin strips into buoyant, fur-like textures.
Pre-Fall 2026 is Demna’s clearest statement yet: Gucci’s future will draw from its past, but with a sharper, sexier, and more distilled modernity. It is a preview of the runway he imagines—and the one he suggests we never got to see.

