Lanvin Pre-Fall 2026: Daywear, Reframed
With Pre-Fall 2026, Peter Copping continued to recalibrate Lanvin, balancing the house’s couture heritage with a sharper focus on modern daywear and more accessible price points. The result was a confident, eclectic collection anchored in volume, knit tailoring, and quiet references to Venice.






Copping’s starting point was Jeanne Lanvin’s 1920s trip to Venice with her niece Marianne, a narrative that surfaced through black-and-white looks, Fortuny-style pleats, flashes of Venetian red, and fluid silhouettes reminiscent of Murano glass. Marbled prints, sinuous dresses, and long chain necklaces punctuated with colored glass drops subtly echoed that influence without tipping into costume.






Practicality guided the core of the lineup. Generous outerwear dominated, from blanket-cut A-line skirts that nodded to travel to voluminous coats layered over leggings or relaxed trousers. Fitted knit tailoring added structure, while commercial highlights included merino wool sweaters finished with a delicate grosgrain ribbon at the back of the neck and short Art Deco–inflected dresses trimmed with shimmering fringe.






To broaden Lanvin’s appeal, Copping introduced sharper, more contemporary notes, such as glossy black faux-fur cropped coats with plunging necklines. The aim was realism with edge—clothes that feel relevant, wearable, and current, without diluting the house’s identity. That ethos extended to accessories, where the popular Cat bag received a sleeker hardware update, replacing the historic mother-and-child emblem with a more modern finish.

