There is a particular kind of discipline required to care about resort / pre-collections. Fashion, in its most distilled form, is supposed to be the thing we live in, not the thing we spectate. Yet certain houses have mastered the art of making the practical feel urgent, the transitional feel essential. Louis Vuitton is one of them.
Less than a week after the women’s pre-collection unfolded at the Frick Museum in New York, a moment that generated the kind of conversation fashion weeks rarely do, the house pivots to quieter territory with the Spring Summer 2027 menswear pre-collection. No landmark setting this time. No spectacle. Just clothes, and a clear argument about what men should be wearing.
That argument is titled Whatever the Weather, and it arrives under Pharrell Williams with the kind of conceptual coherence that separates a collection from a catalogue. At its core, this is a wardrobe for the travelling man, built for shifting climates and shifting dress codes. But the question pre-collections always raise is not what a house can imagine. It is what a house actually wants you to wear. What stays. What is sustainable beyond the season’s logic.
With Pharrell Williams at the creative helm, that question is never straightforward. Every Louis Vuitton men’s release carries his signature, a recipe of undeniable cool effect that sits somewhere between heritage reverence and cultural renegade. The Spring Summer 2027 pre-collection is no different, and in many ways it is where that duality feels most pronounced.
The Monogram Reporter motif grounds the collection in materiality first. Coated canvas meets brown suede, leather panels absorb 1980s workwear codes, and the result sits convincingly between heritage hiking and contemporary luxury. The blue nylon puffer with debossed Monogram leather shoulder panels is a strong piece, structured without being stiff. The reversible leather gilet in orange coated canvas is more provocative, orange being a colour that rarely finds easy homes in menswear, and its pairing with suede is the kind of risk that justifies the collection’s ambition.
The Weatherman section amplifies archetypes, and this is where the collection earns its critical attention. The puffer coat rendered in mini-Monogram jacquard tailoring fabric is a genuine idea, the kind of code-swap that transforms function into something worth discussing. The fisherman’s yellow slickers interpreted in shiny calfskin are perhaps more photograph than wardrobe, but they anchor the weather metaphor with clarity. The reversible knitted jumpers, cable on one side and Monogram on the other, are the most wearable expression of the collection’s logic. Packable pieces, particularly the fleece blouson that compresses into its own front pocket, confirm that Louis Vuitton under Pharrell is serious about utility as aesthetic, not just as talking point.
Louis Vuitton Men’s Pre Spring 2027 Photo Sarah BlaisLouis Vuitton Men’s Pre Spring 2027 Photo Sarah BlaisLouis Vuitton Men’s Pre Spring 2027 Photo Sarah Blais
Clouded Perception introduces trompe l’oeil, and here the collection becomes its most playful and its most demanding. The Jersey Trompe L’Oeil pieces, leather garments printed to look and feel like sweat-shirting, require a specific kind of consumer: one who understands the joke, appreciates the craftsmanship behind it, and is willing to pay for both. The silver-coated denim jacket that feigns rain-soaked wetness is sharp. The cashmere suit posing as denim is quieter but arguably more impressive. The spongy rubber spray simulating mud splashes on the LV Trainer and LV Ranger shoes is where the collection tips closest to gimmick, though it lands, just, because the shoes themselves are built well enough to carry the conceit.
The Weather Patterns narrative print, a cartoon tracing a young businessman’s day from sunny New York to stormy Paris, is the collection’s most overtly Pharrell-coded gesture. It is playful, it is personal, and it is the kind of detail that either resonates or reads as excess depending on where you stand. The Louis Vuitton archive has always balanced gravitas with levity. This motif leans into the latter, and on shirting and small leather goods it works. On denim work suits it requires conviction to carry.
Louis Vuitton Men’s Pre Spring 2027 Photo Sarah BlaisLouis Vuitton Men’s Pre Spring 2027 Photo Sarah BlaisLouis Vuitton Men’s Pre Spring 2027 Photo Sarah Blais
The bags confirm the collection’s priorities. The umbrella-shaped Monogram Canvas bag is the kind of statement object that exists to be photographed and remembered, which is precisely its function. The Keepall 35 with 3D-printed raindrop embellishment operates on similar terms. The Surplus Brut reinterpretation in dark blue supple denim with a degradé effect is the bag story with the most longevity, because it looks like weather, not just weather-themed.
In footwear, the LV Ranger as a lightweight walking boot built from black suede, rubber and ripstop is a strong addition. The LV Drop 300 evolving with a mohair and mesh upper is interesting but softer in its intent. The LV Trainer remains the workhorse of the lineup, appearing across multiple constructions and prints, and its presence in the Monogram Reporter compositions and the Speedy Infinity print in blue and yellow gives the collection visual continuity from opening look to closing shoe.
What this pre-collection ultimately affirms is that Louis Vuitton under Pharrell Williams is not making clothes for a man who is unsure. The wardrobe presumes confidence, travel, cultural fluency, and a willingness to engage with fashion as conversation. It hits all the marks one would expect from the house. The real measure, as always with pre-collections, is not what is proposed in the lookbook. It is what survives contact with the actual wardrobe. On that front, the reversible pieces, the structured outerwear and the Monogram Reporter bags make the strongest case for longevity. The rest makes a strong case for Louis Vuitton as one of the few houses that still knows how to make us care about the moments between seasons.
Zarko Davinic is an architect by education, Founder and Editor-in-Chief at DSCENE Publishing, having studied at the Faculty of Civil Engineering and Architecture in Niš, Serbia. In 2007, he founded DSCENE, which grew into an international publishing network with MMSCENE, ARCHISCENE, and DSCENE Beauty. Today, the platform features two globally distributed print editions, combining a vision for design, fashion, and culture.
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