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Silhouettes were sharply engineered yet deliberately unsettled. Tailoring appeared familiar at first glance, only to reveal distorted proportions, layered volumes, and unexpected structural interruptions. Jackets felt armored, trousers exaggerated, and coats sculpted to sit somewhere between protection and provocation.
The palette stayed true to the house’s language—dominant blacks, deep neutrals, and muted tones—allowing construction to speak louder than color. Fabrics were worked hard: dense wool, technical textiles, and layered surfaces emphasized weight, movement, and intention rather than decoration.
What stood out most was the sense of discipline. Every look felt deliberate, controlled, and unapologetically intellectual. There was no nostalgia, no trend-chasing—just Kawakubo’s continued insistence that menswear can still be radical without being loud.
For Fall/Winter 2026, Comme des Garçons Homme Plus didn’t offer answers. Instead, it posed questions about masculinity, structure, and freedom—leaving the audience to sit with the discomfort, exactly as intended.



