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Blog / Paris Fashion Week Men’s Spring/Summer 2027 (SS27) Day One: Saint Laurent and Louis Vuitton Define Opening Night

Paris Fashion Week Men’s Spring/Summer 2027 (SS27) Day One: Saint Laurent and Louis Vuitton Define Opening Night

Paris Fashion Week Men’s Spring/Summer 2027 (SS27) Day One: Saint Laurent and Louis Vuitton Define Opening Night

Paris Men's Fashion Week SS27 Day One
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Blog / Paris Fashion Week Men’s Spring/Summer 2027 (SS27) Day One: Saint Laurent and Louis Vuitton Define Opening Night

Paris Fashion Week Men’s Spring/Summer 2027 kicked off on Tuesday, June 23, with Saint Laurent and Louis Vuitton anchoring the opening night. The schedule runs through June 28. Day one alone gave the industry plenty to chew on, and honestly, plenty to argue about over dinner later that night.

Saint Laurent Built a Show Around What It Chose Not to Say

Anthony Vaccarello has a habit of saying more by saying less. Tuesday’s collection leaned all the way into that instinct, framed as a study in omission, the idea that a look finishes itself in the viewer’s head rather than on the runway. There’s something almost old-fashioned about that approach in 2027, when most houses are racing to fill every inch of a look with a statement.

What came down the runway backed up the thinking. Tailoring stayed close to the body without ever feeling tight. Shoulders held their shape but never overstated it. Proportions were pared back just enough that you noticed the cut rather than the volume, and a handful of pieces leaned on texture alone to do the work that embellishment usually handles elsewhere. Nothing about it was showy. A lot of menswear right now is busy fighting to be the loudest thing in the room, and this collection simply opted out of that fight.

Madonna was there too, seated near Charli xcx among a handful of other famous faces, and that’s the bit everyone screenshotted first. Fair enough, she does have a way of pulling focus wherever she sits. The stronger story unfolded on the runway, where Vaccarello continued to argue that the most memorable clothes are often the ones that say the least.

Louis Vuitton Brought an Actual Beach Into Paris Men's Fashion Week

A short drive away, Pharrell Williams went the other direction entirely. His Louis Vuitton show turned its venue into something close to an inner city beach, with sand covering the ground and a tidal wave structure crashing water across the space as models walked a wooden, boardwalk-style runway. Whether it was a response to the heatwave or simply another expression of Williams’s instinct for spectacle hardly mattered. The effect was the same. 

This is the pattern with his run at Louis Vuitton so far. Each show plays out less like a seasonal presentation and more like a cultural event that happens to include clothes. Saint Laurent built its evening on restraint. Vuitton made spectacle the point on Tuesday, delivering a show people may remember more for its staging than its clothes, and that says plenty about Williams’s priorities, for better or worse.

Auralee Gave the Day Its Calmest, Most Confident Hour

Tucked between two major spectacles, Japanese label Auralee held its show at an entirely different pace. No installation, no oversized set piece, nothing competing for attention except the clothes themselves. Fabric carried the show from start to finish. Colour stayed soft, almost apologetic in places, and the silhouettes leaned toward something lived in rather than constructed. It rewarded the kind of looking that actually slows down, rather than the kind that snaps a photo and scrolls on.

That’s been the label’s draw for a few seasons now, built quietly under founder Ryota Iwai since 2012. On a day filled with fog machines and man-made waves, a show with neither felt almost rebellious in its own small way. Not every brand needs noise to hold a room, and Auralee has never once seemed curious about what that noise would even sound like on its own runway.

What Day One Told Us About the Paris Men's Fashion Week Ahead

Line the three up side by side, and you get a fairly honest read on where menswear stands heading into this season. One house bet everything on restraint. Another bet everything on scale. A third didn’t bet on much beyond craft and seemed entirely fine staying out of the conversation about who technically “won” the day.

None of these approaches canceled each other out, which is probably the most useful thing Tuesday proved. Paris doesn’t need every house chasing the same idea of what a fashion show should look like. It needs exactly this kind of friction, restraint sitting next to spectacle, and sitting next to quiet confidence all in the same 24 hours.

Five days remain, and the heat shows no sign of easing. Several of the week’s most anticipated debuts are still ahead, including designers stepping into new roles, so if day one set the standard, the real question is whether Paris gets an answer in the days to come.

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