
Jonathan Anderson unveiled his first Dior Pre-Fall 2026 menswear collection on Instagram, offering an early look at his direction for 2026. He chose a manor on Île Saint-Louis in Paris as the setting, where photographer Peter Joseph Smith captured a sequence of images that trace Anderson’s shift between historical references, prep codes, and denim. The cast, Charlie Tilling-Cole, Edoardo Duse, Elliot Belot, Gilles, Okiki Shodimu, and Suyong Jung, present silhouettes that alternate between historical formality and contemporary casual wear. With Benjamin Bruno overseeing styling, the presentation signals how Anderson continues to explore his more adventurous side within Dior menswear.
The opening look sets the tone through an 18th-century inspired coat and a matching blouson in royal blue. Anderson uses ornate floral embroidery to anchor the silhouette. Light-wash tapered jeans counter the formal energy of the outerwear, while a taupe suede messenger bag introduces one of the new accessories in the lineup. The next outfit revisits his oversized SS26 cargo shorts. Here, they return with a prominent medieval crest placed across the front. Anderson pairs them with a loose knitted sweater and burgundy loafers, creating a shift from historical reference to grounded sportswear.


He moves toward modern prep codes with looks shaped by Ivy influences. A jersey knit sweatshirt trimmed in forest green appears first, with a Dior wordmark placed at the neckline. Anderson sets it against retro gym shorts and a contemporary Dior sneaker. He continues this direction with a sharper prep combination: a pinstriped shirt layered under a knitted Henley sweater, a navy blazer, and soft yellow shorts.
A slim washed denim suit presents a clean outline, while another pair of the crested cargo shorts appears in a wide, relaxed cut rendered in the same wash. Anderson shifts back into tailoring through a sculpted navy blazer and a pinstriped shirt, but he anchors the look with distressed double-knee carpenter pants. This approach continues in a brown tweed blazer styled with baggy jeans, suede loafers, and a slouchy shoulder bag. The repeated presence of denim shows Anderson’s interest in adjusting the balance, using formal elements while lowering their intensity through straightforward materials.

In conversation with Vogue Runway, Anderson described the collection as a continuation of the direction he started with his first Dior menswear outing. “The first collection was chapter one. I don’t want to run away from it too quickly. This is chapter two. I’m trying to find a new vocabulary for Dior menswear. Reinforcing it, refining it. Every single detail counts. It’s giving importance to small things.”
Connections to the Spring Summer 2026 menswear collection remain visible, particularly in the aristocratic references and the contrast between formal structure and relaxed pieces. Anderson continues to refine this approach while building the next stages of his tenure. In May, he will present the Dior Cruise 2026 collection in Los Angeles. An official venue has yet to be confirmed, but this next chapter will likely extend the vocabulary he has already begun to define.

















