
There’s a peculiar melancholy threading through Mihara Yasuhiro’s latest collection, one that refuses easy categorization. “I hate summer,” the designer declares in his show notes, yet the garments tell a different story altogether, one of longing wrapped in restraint, memory suspended in fabric.
The collection opens with studied ease. A camel collared shirt sits atop cream drawstring trousers, anchored by pristine white trainers (a signature grounding device for the house). It’s deliberately underdone, almost conversational. The silhouettes breathe, there’s no aggression here, no architectural drama demanding attention. Instead, what emerges is something far more subversive: a studied casualness that conceals its own precision.
What makes MIHARA YASUHIRO’s approach distinctive remains its relationship with layering and subtle displacement. A grey wool suit moves with an almost disquieting ease, its oversized proportions softened by proportion and restraint rather than exaggeration. The white shirt collar reveals itself at the neckline; the trousers break at the ankle with quiet intention. It’s impeccable tailoring masquerading as effortlessness, which is perhaps the highest compliment one can pay to menswear.

The collection refuses the obvious summer palette. Instead of bright optimism, Yasuhiro offers muted neutrals, warm taupes, pale creams, and soft greys. There’s a beige bomber jacket paired with cream shorts and platform boots that shouldn’t work yet absolutely does, its contradictions (bulky outerwear meets abbreviated bottoms) somehow resolving into coherence. The designer’s hand is everywhere, but nowhere you expect it.
What strikes most is the emotional restraint on display. These aren’t clothes designed to perform; they’re clothes designed to contain. Each piece sits on the body like a private thought, the kind you might circle back to in quiet moments. The colour palette mirrors the designer’s stated ambivalence toward summer itself, not the blazing certainty of the season, but its aftermath, when memory becomes more vivid than the actual experience.
By the collection’s close, the through-line becomes clear. MIHARA YASUHIRO has created a wardrobe for someone caught between seasons, between childhood summers and adult reality, between loving and resenting the same moment. It’s sophisticated, certainly. But beneath that polished surface, there’s something authentically vulnerable at work, a designer unafraid to let contradiction live at the heart of his vision.
Discover more of the Maison Mihara Yasuhiro Summer 2027 collection in our gallery:
Casting was handled by Casting Director Henry Thomas, bringing models Abdallah El Farjani, Antoine Brabant, Bennet Leyde, Boubacar Ndongo, Chengwei Dong, Daniel Ajang, Devonte Obi, Diana Goriunova, Dries Haseldonckx, Fallou Tandine, Gino Tornior, Hunter Lison, Julien Saunier, Ko Eun Woo, Lamine Gueye, Leander Martin, Luiz Silva, Marlon Mejia, Minseo Kyung, Nikita Osminin, Prince Charles, Saliou Seck, Sekou Ndiaye, Tim Pashkevich
Find the latest from Paris Fashion Week.

















