
Marc Jacobs doesn’t whisper. He doesn’t tiptoe. He doesn’t ease into a season. Instead, he charges in, dolls in tow, megabows tied, and heels scraping the marble floor of the New York Public Library. His Fall Winter 2025 collection lasted five minutes flat, just long enough to reset the tone of the season and remind everyone that restraint has left the building.
This wasn’t a nod to quiet luxury. It was a scream for maximalism, artifice, and theatricality. Jacobs pulled apart proportion, texture, and silhouette, tossing in references that felt part haunted nursery, part surrealist archive. The first look, a voluminous lilac lace blouse tucked into sculptural cargo pants, announced the shift. From there, the runway spiraled into a universe where everything was exaggerated and flatness became its own visual joke. Evening dresses wore bows that looked like cardboard cutouts; denim ballooned into stiff, boxy shells.

Styling didn’t play it safe either. Platform shoes towered past absurdity, lifting models onto a plane somewhere between performance art and cartoon. Garments echoed this tension, collaged bras layered over pearl-strewn bodices, heart-shaped sleeves that felt more costume than couture, and rear-padding that twisted ideas of glamour into near satire.

Despite the theatrical chaos, Jacobs used the moment to introduce something entirely grounded: his new handbag, The Cristina. Worn by select front-row guests, the ruched U-shaped bag brought a sleek, sculptural counterpoint to the runway’s fantasy. It landed as the commercial anchor of the collection, clean but with enough curve to suggest mischief.

Jacobs has always thrived at this edge, where fashion becomes farce and then circles back to beauty. He builds dreams from distortion, crafting characters that walk a fine line between elegance and oddity. In this show, compressed in time but not in imagination, he reaffirmed his place as American fashion’s great illusionist.
