Bold tailoring, sculptural silhouettes, and exquisite craftsmanship define LOEWE’s menswear selection in Paris by Jack McCollough and Lazaro Hernandez.
Haider Ackermann unveils Tom Ford’s Fall/Winter 2026 menswear collection in Paris, merging sculpted tailoring, velvet textures, and cinematic elegance into a new era of modern masculinity.
Let's make it clear that menswear has advanced big steps in the last 5 years, but we can not deny that there are designers with bizarre and exotic taste and they could fall into the absurd.
The grayscale world conjured up each season by Thom Browne is bizarre, twisted, sometimes unintentionally hilarious, and sometimes entirely intentionally so. The last is far more entrancing that the first—when you realize Browne is laughing with you, rather than you at him (or, perhaps, vice versa).
A Bob Marley medley backed Paul Smith’s spring show, where models loped a rainbow runway in snazzy clothes that were just as colorful, and occasionally trippy.
At Lanvin, Lucas Ossendrijver had lines of poetry circling waists: “It doesn’t matter right or wrong,” read one. He also splattered his spring collection liberally with patches, graphic bands, photo prints and symbols, including many arrows
Brazilian heat meets Italian attitude 🇮🇹🔥
Aris Navarro fronts GCDS SS26 “Estate Italiana,” turning a raw rooftop into the sexiest runway of the season. Laundry, sunlight, and pure summer energy—this is fashion stripped down to its essence.
Alvise Rigo is the name defining 2026.
From rugby fields to cinematic frames, he steps into LE MILE Magazine’s Identity Issue 40 with a powerful statement on masculinity, vulnerability, and transformation.
Caio Enrico, straight from Brazil, is making waves in the States with natural curls, sharp bone structure, and effortless presence in front of Andre Gabb’s lens.