4.7 C
Munich
星期六, 18 10 月, 2025

Margaret Howell Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

Must read

Beauty Marks: The Best Beauty Looks of The Week

Welcome back to Beauty Marks: Vogue’s weekly edition of the best moments in celebrity beauty, from Vogue editors’ IG feeds, and all the glam...

The Anatomy of Charli XCX’s Style

When Charli xcx released brat in the summer of 2024, she also introduced to the masses her distinct personal style. Since then, the so-called...

From School Daze to Sinners, Ruth E. Carter Walks Vogue Through Her Life in Looks

Ruth E. Carter is a costume designer by trade, but the label doesn’t do the Hollywood legend justice. Words aren’t enough to tell even...

A Closer Look at the Magnificent Gerhard Richter Show at Fondation Louis Vuitton

Essentially, Richter spent a lifetime interested in “the relationship we have with reality,” as he has put it, without ever starting with reality, and...

This may be the only collection where the humble, functional garb of the postal worker is a source of inspiration. (And actually let’s hear it for postal workers, for their public service, sometimes against all odds.) But then this is Margaret Howell we’re talking about, the British designer who has raised the everyday and the familiar to an art form, and made some of the best clothes—real, thoughtful, intelligent, sensitive clothes—of this or any season. These were most definitely not about the hoopla of spring 2026’s big reset, or whatever we’re calling it; rather the pleasure to be found when things go quiet and still after it, and we all get to thinking, ‘Well, what are we actually going to wear?’

“This collection is about ease and balance,” Howell said. “I wanted the clothes to be relaxed, with soft tailoring and generous shapes. It’s about proportion, always with a sense of wear. Pieces work quietly together, comfortably.” Which takes us back to the mailman. Howell delivered a vintage uniform: short, zip-front jacket in crisp black wool, paired with matching tailored shorts—shorts were a recurring motif here, the basis for her vision of spring’s suiting, irrespective of gender—and worn with a striped shirt which to the naked eye looked conventional enough, until one noticed the contrast stripe bands on its short sleeves.

In essence, this calibration of something prosaic was typical of the joys on offer here: the gray woolen sweater bonded so that while it looked like a conventional crewneck it actually had a much sportier hand when you felt it; the Ventile jackets with their storm-flap collars, like cut down trench coats, the roomy but abbreviated silhouette adding a little bit of an edge. There was also Howell’s throwback to the ’90s, her ’90s, with small, neat jackets—in linen/silk, say, in a delicious shade of earthy brown, part of her palette along with parchment, pewter, chamomile and a dusty pink so delicate it looked like the memory of the color—over a long, slim skirt with a deeper slit than in the past. The update was to make it easier to move in it, the result of the team trying it on and giving their feedback.

That’s not the only way Howell’s colleagues helped with the collection: The dotted silk scarf which popped up here and there came about because a long-term employee of Howell’s had been wearing hers, which is decades old, and seeing it on her, Howell wanted to bring it back. There’s something charming about that; a gesture of something treasured and used finding its way back into the spotlight, but without any of the attendant hoopla which has become so much the story of fashion today. Instead, for Howell, it’s a constantly measured and unshowy state of what’s past, what’s present, and what’s future.

#Margaret #Howell #Spring #ReadytoWear #Collection

- Advertisement -

More articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisement -

Latest article

Beauty Marks: The Best Beauty Looks of The Week

Welcome back to Beauty Marks: Vogue’s weekly edition of the best moments in celebrity beauty, from Vogue editors’ IG feeds, and all the glam...

The Anatomy of Charli XCX’s Style

When Charli xcx released brat in the summer of 2024, she also introduced to the masses her distinct personal style. Since then, the so-called...

From School Daze to Sinners, Ruth E. Carter Walks Vogue Through Her Life in Looks

Ruth E. Carter is a costume designer by trade, but the label doesn’t do the Hollywood legend justice. Words aren’t enough to tell even...

A Closer Look at the Magnificent Gerhard Richter Show at Fondation Louis Vuitton

Essentially, Richter spent a lifetime interested in “the relationship we have with reality,” as he has put it, without ever starting with reality, and...

Shop the Best Celeb Street Style Looks of the Week

The drop in temperature seems to be staying for good, which means the real shift to fall outfitting is adamant. Who better to draw...