There’s a lingering question hovering over this new chapter at Gucci: Is this a strategic evolution—or simply a targeted demographic maneuver dressed up as creative direction? One critique points out that history will ultimately decide whether this appointment signals a meaningful shift or just another round of “audience focus” in corporate language. The kind of segmented visibility that converts easily into short-term attention, not lasting cultural relevance.


Because the assumption remains: desirability can supposedly be manufactured faster than meaning.


And that tension is visible—not just at Gucci, but also in the current cycles of Dior, Chanel, and several other houses navigating the same nostalgia loop.


A Safe Direction Cloaked as a Revival


Some early reactions embrace the collection with hope:
“I like it and hopefully it will be well received. I won’t complain if he continues the Tom Ford direction.”


But beneath that optimism lies a more pressing concern. The work feels safe—dangerously close to pedestrian. It doesn’t have the strength to re-ignite Gucci into a true cultural “moment.” Yes, Demna is referencing the Ford era, and on the surface, it feels fresh enough. But the deeper layers—vision, audacity, impact—are missing.


The Pressure Cooker
Kering’s expectations are enormous. And it shows.


He can’t push too hard—one misstep could end the tenure.


He can’t play it too safe either—another spiral into the archives risks eroding the brand from within.


It’s a precarious place: do too much, you’re gone; do too little, you’re forgotten.


The Clothes Themselves: Nostalgia Without Teeth


When you strip the looks down to separates, the façade becomes clearer. This is Tom Ford–era Gucci cosplay—only on a reduced budget and with little tailoring rigor. Unlike Balenciaga, where an obnoxious aesthetic often concealed genuinely thoughtful construction, here the pieces feel basic. At times even cheap.


Some silhouettes wouldn’t pass the cutting room floor for LaQuan Smith. The yearning for nostalgia is palpable, but originality feels absent. And when everything leans on archival pulls, it becomes difficult to decode what image or identity Demna is trying to build for Gucci.


What does this Gucci stand for—beyond memory?


Conclusion
Pre-Fall 2026 feels caught in limbo: part homage, part hesitation, part crisis of identity. There’s a desire to please, a desire to reference, a desire to survive—but not yet a desire to innovate.


Until Gucci can move beyond nostalgia as strategy, it may keep chasing an era that no one can recreate.


















Photographed @demna
Art Direction @nameisriccardo
Hair @anthonyturnerhair
Makeup @samvissermakeup




Feels so personal, conservative, demure, and casual, can be work for the masses.