
Harris Reed revealed his Spring Summer 2026 collection, The Aviary, inside the grand St Pancras Hotel. The Gothic architecture of the venue set the stage for Reed’s tenth season, where garments balanced the tension between confinement and freedom. Models appeared as though in flight, their clothing shaped into cages or extending outward like wings, each look designed to suggest movement and liberation.
Reed built the collection around dramatic silhouettes, reshaping the body with exaggerated lines and structural forms. A sharply tailored suit redefined proportion with extended hips, flared trousers, and shoulders that widened into sharp angles above a tightly cinched waist. Corsets grew outward from the torso to form wing-like shapes, while signature crinolines reemerged as mermaid skirts, distorted volumes, or chest armor constructed from red grosgrain ribbon. These transformations treated the body as architecture, amplifying scale and drama.


Textiles became a stage for experimentation, with Reed deepening his collaboration with Fromental, the luxury wallpaper specialists. Archival Nottingham lace informed a new lace print that appeared on a blue duchess bodice embroidered with chenille silk and on a pink corset with curved fan sleeves. Lilac and chartreuse satins carried hand-painted wisteria motifs finished with gilded tendrils and fine embroidery. Tortoishell and tiger patterns, created by fine artists, were translated into chiffon, duchess, and silk, producing layers of organic texture within the collection.
Surface treatments intensified the collection, with gilding, embroidery, and layered velvets creating depth and variation. Fromental’s designs were reinterpreted through hand painting, embroidery, and the application of gold leaf, transforming fabrics into canvases. Velvet appeared brushed, bruised, and in fluid devoré, catching light differently with each treatment. The richness of these materials expanded the visual impact of the garments, reinforcing their theatrical presence on the runway.


The Aviary demonstrated Reed’s ongoing approach to fashion as performance. The silhouettes shifted between cages, wings, and armor, while fabrics carried the imprint of painting and artisanal craft. The ornate setting of St Pancras Hotel echoed the maximalism of the designs, creating a dialogue between architecture and fashion.
