
Summary
To mark the centennial of the house’s menswear division, Artistic Director Peter Copping presented the LanvinFall/Winter 2026 collection in Paris Fashion Week, titled “Homme du Monde.” The presentation serves as a sophisticated recalibration of the maison’s identity, honoring brand founder Jeanne Lanvin’s 1926 debut as the first couturier to offer dedicated men’s tailoring.
The collection draws heavily on Jeanne Lanvin’s 1920s travels to Venice, translating the city’s rich textures and luxury into a contemporary wardrobe for the global traveler. Sharp tailoring in emblematic gray flannel sits alongside jewel tones of amethyst and absinthe. Copping bridges history and the present masterfully by utilizing figured Venetian fabrics from the founder’s personal archives, reproduced by original suppliers Bevilacqua for modern worker jackets and denim.
Echoes of the 1920s appear in cocoon coats and Art Deco-inspired knitwear, while Fortuny Plissé eased tuxedo trousers add a sense of fluid elegance. The collection also explores unexpected archival elements, such as animalier prints on shearling and abstracted Murano glass patterns. In addition, a hooded sweater in Lanvin blue serves as a wearable souvenir of the house’s history. It features playful iterations of archival labels, acting as a celebratory trace of the passage of time. By blending heritage craftsmanship with modern nylons, Copping asserts a refined vision for the twenty-first-century Lanvin man.
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