
Anthony Vaccarello‘s Winter 2026 collection for Saint Laurent arrives as a study in masculine contradiction: the vulnerability of intimacy colliding with the armour of professional dress. The creative director has anchored this season in a deceptively simple moment, the Parisian dawn, that liminal space between night and morning—but what emerges is a sharp interrogation of how men move through the world, how they dress themselves back into it after exposure, and what that ritual of concealment actually means.
FALL WINTER 2026 MENSWEAR COLLECTIONS
The collection draws its emotional core from James Baldwin’s Giovanni’s Room, that seminal 1956 novel about desire, displacement, and the psychological weight of conventional masculinity. Vaccarello has seized on the novel’s most potent image: David leaving Giovanni’s Paris room at early dawn, the exchange of desire and yearning giving way to the pressure of what lies ahead. It’s a moment of transformation, yes—but also one of necessary performance. The clothes that follow aren’t about liberation. They’re about re-entry.
Dressing as Ritual, Concealment as Strength
What makes this collection distinctly Saint Laurent is how Vaccarello treats the act of dressing as both vulnerability and power. The silhouette is lean and sinuous, almost fragile in its construction—soft, crumpled textures that suggest time-worn intimacy rather than pristine tailoring. But layered over this is the house’s signature smoking jacket, its sharp shoulders and structured frame functioning not as exhibitionism but as a kind of emotional armour.

The palette is almost entirely black, chosen deliberately for its dual nature: classicism and iconoclasm at once. It grounds the collection in Saint Laurent’s DNA while also stripping away distraction. What you’re left with is pure tension between what’s revealed and what’s concealed—a striped shirt glimpsed beneath an overcoat, exposed legs and polished shoes, the formal codes of business dress pushed into something more ambiguous and slightly detached.
The Unbutton, the Button
The collection’s narrative moves through stages of dressing: from unclothed to clothed, unbuttoned to buttoned, the ritual of transforming ourselves from our most naked selves to beings ready to re-enter the world. It’s a progression that feels both deeply personal and utterly universal. A long overcoat over a shirt-and-tie reads like morning-after dressing—the clothes you grab quickly, the look that says I was somewhere else. Elsewhere, roomy pleated trousers paired with a striped shirt and sunglasses suggest a man moving through the city with a kind of cool detachment, corporate codes fractured just enough to suggest something beneath the surface.

This is Saint Laurent’s continuing conversation about what masculinity can mean: not the old post-war bourgeois model that Baldwin was writing against, but something more honest. A man who acknowledges his own vulnerability while still moving through the world with intention. A man who understands that dressing is never neutral—it’s always a negotiation between exposure and protection.
Intimacy as Presentation
Vaccarello presents this collection in a space weighted with the power of intimacy and memory. The clothes don’t shout. They whisper, they suggest, they reveal through concealment. The high boots ground the look in earth; the smoking jacket’s signature strength vanquishes uncertainty without denying the vulnerability beneath. It’s fashion that trusts its audience to read the subtext, to understand that the most powerful statement a man can make is acknowledging what he’s protecting—and why.
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