Calvin Klein Collection Fall/Winter 2026 Ready-to-Wear New York

Veronica Leoni Reclaims the American Legacy in New York

Inside The McCourt at The ShedVeronica Leoni staged her Fall/Winter 2026 ready-to-wear show for Calvin Klein Collection with striking clarity. Rows of red folding chairs formed an intimate circle within the venue’s larger square footprint — a spatial metaphor for the brand itself: a refined, designer-priced nucleus inside a vast global empire.

Calvin Klein Collection represents the ultimate expression of the American house — sold not at the new SoHo flagship, but through global luxury partners like Net-a-PorterHolt RenfrewPrintempsMaxfieldModa Operandi, and Mytheresa, alongside its own e-commerce. Meanwhile, Calvin Klein’s jeans, underwear, and fragrances continue to dominate a broader global audience — the commercial backbone supporting the brand’s elevated runway expression.

Looking Back to Move Forward

This season, Leoni forged a sharper connective thread between the house’s legacy and her contemporary lens. During previews, her mood boards were filled with Calvin Klein ad campaigns from the late ’70s and early ’80s — the era that defined the brand’s intellectual minimalism and sensual restraint.

“I wanted to start the season fighting the stereotypical perception we all have about Calvin,” Leoni explained. “As you dig into the foundation, you discover this wonderful world — this perfection and practice of elegance that still feels extremely relevant.”

The result was a disciplined yet provocative collection that embraced sharp minimalism with an unmistakable obsession with the body.

Hedonistic Minimalism

Long, slim tailoring featured peek-a-boo backs exposing logo bras — a subtle but confident nod to the brand’s underwear empire. Prim midi dresses in tweed revealed contrasting, slightly sheer backsides. The tension between covered and uncovered felt deliberate and intelligent.

See also  Todd Snyder Spring/Summer 2018 New York

A “strong sense of hedonism” ran through the lineup:

  • ’80s-inspired rolled wool jersey muscle T-shirts
  • Skinny grosgrain-striped tailored trousers
  • Transparent leather trench coats
  • Sleeveless men’s power suits

Yet Leoni balanced sensuality with restraint. For those adverse to showing skin, there were heightened staples — lean neutral tailoring, sculptural topcoats with exaggerated “boy scout” collars in colorful shearling, everyday leather bombers, and bonded satin occasion dresses. Artisanal slip dresses in velvet and 3D floral mesh added texture without excess.

The 1976 Jean Returns

Perhaps the most significant archival gesture was the reintroduction of the original 1976 Calvin Klein runway jean. As the brand approaches its 50th anniversary, Leoni re-edited the silhouette and reintroduced the logo — celebrating a pivotal lifestyle moment before the explosive 1980 campaign featuring Brooke Shields and before Calvin Klein Jeans dominated pop culture.

“It was a very intelligent and smart take from Mr. Klein to put this into collection,” Leoni noted — acknowledging the foresight that turned denim into a cultural symbol.

Indeed, this path — rooted in archival clarity and American precision — felt stronger than some of the billowing, colorful dresses that diluted the collection’s otherwise disciplined flex of restraint.

Past, Present, and Global Fame

Friday’s audience embodied Calvin Klein’s multi-generational power. Shields attended alongside Jennie of Blackpink and Tell Me Lies stars Grace Van Patten and Jackson White — a living tableau of the brand’s past, present, and future.

With Fall/Winter 2026, Veronica Leoni didn’t just revisit Calvin Klein’s archives — she reframed them. The show proved that American minimalism, when executed with conviction and respect for the body, still holds immense power on a New York runway.

See also  Ralph Lauren Men's Fall/Winter 2026 Milan

And in that circle of red chairs, the message was clear: restraint is once again radical.

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