Milan Men’s Fashion Week Highlights Fall/Winter 2026 Collection

Lindsay Judge   |   22-01-2026

As the shows took place in Milan this January, we bring you highlights from the men’s Fall/Winter 2026 collections set to define men’s wardrobes later this year.

 

Zegna

Zegna’s Fall/Winter 2026 collection reimagines the family wardrobe as a sacred space where generations meet through the act of wearing. Real pieces from Gildo and Paolo Zegna’s personal heritage form an intimate backdrop, including the preserved “ABITO N.1”, a bespoke suit from the 1930s that anchors the story in craftsmanship and continuity. Opening Milan Fashion Week Men’s, Alessandro Sartori’s latest collection features a long, relaxed silhouette, with broader shoulders, higher waists, and fluid trousers.

 

Prada

Prada presented its Fall Winter 2026 menswear, “Before and Next” at Milan Fashion Week. Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons offered a collection focused on the evolution of menswear at the brand, where memory shapes the future. Elongated, precise silhouettes reveal the body within, built from familiar codes thoughtfully reimagined.

Collaged prints reference antiquity, renaissance and modernity, layering time into each garment, while the Deposito of the Fondazione Prada becomes a liminal stage between private reflection and public display. A deeply cerebral vision of tailoring that feels restrained, poetic and profoundly human.

Tod’s

Tod’s Men’s Fall Winter 2026/27 is a collection rooted in timeless Italian craftsmanship and a devotion to doing things beautifully. At its centre sits the Winter Gommino, a true ode to meticulous handwork, exceptional materials, and the quiet art of savoir faire. Its proportions and sole revisit the brand’s origins, proving that great design endures beyond trends while staying relevant for today. Rendered in plush suede with cashmere or shearling linings for snowy mountain days, or in refined antiqued leather for city life, the Winter Gommino moves effortlessly between worlds.

Giorgio Armani

For Autumn/Winter 2026-27, Giorgio Armani unveils Cangiante, a menswear collection built around iridescence and shifting colour. Creative director Leo Dell’Orco makes his debut after four decades alongside Armani, placing subtle yet luminous hues at the forefront.

With references to designs from the brand’s 1980s designs, silhouettes are relaxed and fluid, featuring blousons, low-buttoned jackets, enveloping coats, and wide trousers that fall effortlessly over suede shoes and boots. Winter fabrics feel especially tactile, from brushed cashmere to velvet and chenille, while soft knitwear includes a geometric jacquard cardigan created with Alanui. Accessories complete the look with oversized totes, crossbody bags, graphic belts and wide-brimmed hats.

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