“The Best Dressed”
There was a hush inside the room — the kind of low-light quiet you’d expect in a late-night jazz bar somewhere between Paris and New York. For Fall/Winter 2026, Junya Watanabe set the tempo with restraint rather than volume, delivering a show titled The Best Dressed with a calm, unmistakable authority.
This season, Watanabe’s vision circled around authenticity and discipline. Classic menswear codes were respected first — then bent with intention. Fedora hats nodded to 1920s elegance, sailor tailoring brushed against punk undertones, and familiar Levi’s references were stripped of casual comfort and rebuilt in wool, leather, and technical fabrics. Denim, once easy and relaxed, became formal, controlled, almost severe.
The collection unfolded in muted tones and a largely monochrome palette. Dull, restrained colours placed the emphasis squarely on construction: sharp tailoring, layered structures, deliberate proportions. Nothing felt decorative for the sake of it. Everything had weight, purpose, and precision.













































The mood was unmistakably noir — precise, disciplined, almost cinematic. With each look, Watanabe reinforced his refusal to chase trends. Instead, he continues to refine his own language, one where heritage, rebellion, and elegance coexist without compromise.
As the final walk concluded, The Best Dressed felt less like a statement and more like a reminder: Junya Watanabe operates in his own world — quietly, rigorously, and always on his own terms.



