
N21 steps into Resort 2026 with a focus on technical discovery and continuous refinement. Alessandro Dell’Acqua directs the collection toward new solutions without abandoning the familiar. He pushes fabric combinations, reshapes traditional silhouettes, and lets experimentation with texture lead the process. This collection looks inward, not for nostalgia, but to refocus on the instincts and visual structures that drive the brand forward.
Dell’Acqua retraced the cuts, surfaces, and textile details that consistently draw his attention, then moved them into wearable frames. He didn’t lean on past formulas. Instead, he gave traditionally “off-limits” materials a new function by placing them into real situations. These choices surfaced naturally, he let the fabrics suggest direction, then responded. The result confirms the shape of his design logic: a sharp-eyed take on the present, grounded in tactile contrast and everyday precision. Dell’Acqua envisioned a woman defined by clarity, not by overt statements. She dresses with subtle irregularity, yet never lacks intent.


The garments hinge on construction. Press pleats return in fresh forms, especially in fluid fabrics like ultralight silk shantung. Pencil skirts meet mannish blazers, shifting the usual proportions. Dresses extend out from this structure: slipdresses land beside black or beige tuxedo jackets, while boxy blazers sit over boxer-style shorts or long pants. Dell’Acqua brings structure to softness by way of pressed shantung, crocheted knits, and jacquard.

Eveningwear builds from these codes. Ecru, black, and white dominate the color palette. Knits come by hand, either crocheted or machine-knit. Dresses made from crêpe de chine appear alongside cotton outerwear and typical British menswear fabrics, think gingham, checks, or wool suiting. These reappear throughout the collection, sometimes in matching sets, sometimes broken up with unexpected textures like neoprene-coated fabric or poplin. The shantung slipdresses carry the same floral print as the pencil skirts, but pair more easily with sweaters. The contrast remains deliberate but controlled.

Another group of looks features grey skirts in full poplin or ultralight shantung, tailored with a firmer structure. These shift the silhouette again, trading drape for shape. Silk georgette dresses bring weightlessness to the midsection before falling into gently feathered hems. In the final passage, crisp straight dresses close the collection, cut in crêpe de chine and feather-effect finishes. A short A-line jacket finishes the lineup.
Accessories follow the same logic. Dell’Acqua introduces two new bags: Cabiria and Billy. Cabiria works as a compact shoulder satchel with magnetic closure, finished with minimal metal accents. Billy channels a basic square format with more structure and studded hardware. Both styles come in white, black, or tan. Shoes span from ballet flats to laceless boots and kitten-heeled slingbacks, made from faux python or classic black leather.
