
Maison Mihara Yasuhiro Spring Summer 2027 carries a quiet melancholy. In the show notes, the designer writes, “I hate summer,” yet the clothes suggest something more conflicted: memory, restraint, and unease moving through the season. Photographer Sohom Das captured exclusive backstage details on site for DSCENE Magazine.
BACKSTAGE
The opening look sets the tone. A camel collared shirt meets cream drawstring trousers and clean white trainers, creating a direct and relaxed first impression. The silhouette feels loose and unforced, with no dramatic structure or loud gesture. Instead, the collection builds its strength through control, proportion, and subtle shifts.


A grey wool suit moves with oversized volume, softened by careful balance. A white shirt collar appears at the neckline, while the trousers fall with quiet precision. Mihara treats tailoring as something lived in, allowing each look to feel personal and slightly unsettled.

The palette avoids obvious summer brightness. Warm taupe, pale cream, muted beige, and soft grey replace seasonal optimism. A beige bomber worn with cream shorts and platform boots creates one of the collection’s strongest contrasts, bringing weight and lightness into the same look.
Discover Maison Mihara Yasuhiro Spring Summer 2027 Collection on DSCENE
What stays longest is the emotional tone. These clothes do not perform for attention. They hold something private, like a thought returned to after time has passed. Mihara uses summer as a space of contradiction, caught between nostalgia and discomfort, childhood memory and adult distance. By the end, the collection reads as a wardrobe for someone standing between seasons, drawn to summer while resisting it.

















