Dior's Jonathan Anderson Finds His Stride with a Garden of Earthly Delights at Paris Fashion Week
Jonathan Anderson’s Fall-Winter 2026 Dior collection reflects Impressionist themes and the tradition of dressing to be seen with floral-inspired silhouettes and fabrics.
- On Tuesday, Jonathan Anderson presented Dior's Fall‑Winter 2026 women's collection on a glass‑walled runway at the Tuileries Garden flooded with golden, Impressionist-like light, described as his most coherent for the fashion house.
- Anderson said he had been thinking about the promenade, people dressing up to go somewhere, and his own status as a tourist, which shaped the show's concept.
- Sculptural knits held shape like origami, paired with shrunken blazers and lampshade skirts in baby-soft shearling, while asymmetrically fastened skirts and crinkled cardigans suggested floral forms, and house codes reworked with Donegal tweed Bar jackets, spiral cage dresses, and crystal-embellished embroidered jeans.
- At Paris Fashion Week, celebrities including Anya Taylor‑Joy, Charlize Theron and Jisoo packed the glass walkways, while the greenhouse staging turned passersby into an unwitting audience.
- Five collections in, the picture is getting clearer as floral, water and visibility motifs shape Dior womenswear through silhouette, while spiral‑cage dresses and robe coats blend spectacle with wearability.
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PFW: At Dior, A Walk In The Park Becomes A Fashion Thesis
Dior Fall/Winter 2026 / All images: supplied On Tuesday afternoon, the Jardin des Tuileries became, once again, a theatre for society. Commissioned in the 16th century by Catherine de’ Medici and later reshaped under Louis XIV, the garden has long been a place to see and be seen, historically enforcing a strict dress code that delineated social ranking. While today it is enjoyed in a far more liberal fashion, for his first Fall/Winter ready-to-w…
Dior’s Jonathan Anderson finds his stride with a garden of earthly delights at Paris Fashion Week
PARIS (AP) — The sun was out over the glass-walled runway at the famed Tuileries Garden in the French capital on Tuesday, flooding Jonathan Anderson 's fall-winter 2026 collection for Dior with a golden light that invoked Impressionist paintings.
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