Every fashion week is simply too packed. It's not humanly possible to absorb every worthy moment, reveal, activity, or presentation. To do so would require superhuman (and frankly concerning) levels of social-media addiction and, let's face it, we've all got it bad enough as is.
Paris Fashion Week Men's Fall/Winter 2026 was as stuffed as any of its predecessors, which makes it quite difficult to sort through the things that mattered and things that, well, maybe mattered less. Here, we've assembled some major and less-major-but-still-relevant items worth consideration amidst a dense spate of news.
This is not a collection of the exciting young talent presenting at or around the week — though that is some of the best stuff out there — nor is it a recap of every need-to-know happening. We all caught the truly great runway shows (and the not-so great ones). This is a collection of standout bits and bites that likely slipped under a casual observer's radar due to a deluge of newsworthy head-turners. And, of course, it's by no means definitive.
KENZO turned Kenzo Takada's house into a venue
The second NIGO-related house moment at Paris Fashion Week was arguably the better of the two, as this one took guests to Kenzo Takada's abode for creative director NIGO's Fall/Winter 2026 KENZO collection. Slippers sat on the stairs and kimono jackets perused the library with an exquisite Japanese-style meditation garden framing it all as the new clothes shared the limelight with the KENZO founder's absurdly elegant living space.
Our Legacy created a manual for its new clothing
Our Legacy makes great clothes. But for FW26, the Swedish clothing line produced "Just Clothes." This self-effacing title belies the collection's wit and intelligence, which was instead laid out in a helpful clothing manual that went deep on the garments' different manufacturing processes and influences.
Kiko Kostadinov debuted Crocs shoes
Though he's more famous for his ASICS sneakers, Kiko Kostadinov does dabble into partnerships with other footwear labels from time to time. Okay, well, it was really just Camper prior to his ongoing ASICS line but Kostadinov's abrupt Crocs partnership reflects a welcome change from the norm (for everyone involved).
Louis Gabriel Nouchi made Alien's body horror kinda suave with it
His label may be better known for its overt paeans to sexuality in its many permutations — FW26 also included an OnlyFans collaboration — but Louis Gabriel Nouchi also knows quality clothes. His new collection pays homage to Ridley Scott's Alien with facehuggers and warped flesh represented here by gauzy textiles, bolstered by sensuous suiting inspired by Ripley's jumpsuit and knitwear so strong it feels futuristic.
Rier made all-organic winter outerwear look inorganically sublime
The Tyrolean luxury label Rier is very much the picture of good taste, and it has the class to not boast about it. Its subdued "garage gear," as it's called, in its FW26 collection likewise bespeaks subtle stylishness by way of transcendent sportswear whose intellectual detailing — including natural cotton wadded with bison wool in place of synthetics — patiently waits to be discovered by those who know.
Junya Watanabe unexpectedly reunited with Stüssy
Though Junya Watanabe's menswear line is typically collaboration paradise, FW26 was comparatively reserved, focusing instead on top hats and tails. But the partnerships that were there hit harder as a result and thus the COMME des GARÇONS designer's unexpected Stüssy reunion had a little extra mustard to it, not least because it was (slightly) more expansive than the first go-round.
Dries Van Noten (again) mastered explosive pattern-play
As creative director of Dries Van Noten, Julian Klausner has very big shoes to fill (or very little shoes, depending how you look at it). He's stepped up to the plate in a big way: his FW26 menswear collection is a show of breathtaking confidence realized with hardcore patterns clashing across clothes as wild as they are wearable. Old shapes, new look. That's how you do Dries justice.
Clarks' quietly released its first clothing line
Everyone knows that Clarks makes shoes. But now the heritage footwear brand also makes clothes. Now, these garments are so ordinary that they could pass for glorified merch, and that's okay. If you waited two centuries before taking a stab at clothing design, you would probably also keep it close to home.
COMME des GARÇONS put on Jason Voorhees' mask
It's hubris to attempt unpicking COMME des GARÇONS founder Rei Kawakubo's seasonal inspirations. The designer herself resists easy categorization: when prompted in rare interviews, she cites zero influences, zero dreams, zero desires, zero plans to keep old clothes or draw ideas for staff to translate into garments. (How much is sincere and how much is Kawakubo prodding interviewers is anyone's guess.) And yet, it's also difficult to look at COMME des GARÇONS HOMME PLUS' models in their cracked hockey masks and severe, dark, warped suits and not feel as though Kawakubo is commenting on the state of... something.