See All The Looks From Louis Vuitton Spring/Summer 2026
Louis Vuitton’s Spring/Summer 2026 show unfolded inside the Louvre, staged in Anne of Austria’s former summer apartments—a setting that set the mood for a collection about intimacy and the private act of dressing. Nicolas Ghesquière flipped the idea of an “indoor wardrobe” on its head, taking house codes of structure and tailoring and softening them into something looser, almost whispered.
Photo Credit: Courtesy of Louis Vuitton
Sheer slips drifted down the runway, seams traced in black piping for just enough definition. Corset-like bodices came undone with gauzy skirts, and robe coats were cinched casually at the waist—halfway between loungewear and couture polish. Even the shoes played into the theme, with slipper-boot hybrids and flats that looked made for gilded hallways rather than city streets.
Photo Credit: Courtesy of Louis Vuitton
There was a quiet confidence in the contrasts: lingerie worn like eveningwear, pajama silhouettes scattered with embroidery, sculptural knit corsets ruffled like relics from another era. A bow-trimmed, sheer sequin gown leaned playful, while floral embroidery brought a hit of sweetness to an otherwise stripped-back lineup. The effect wasn’t retreat—it was individuality, a reminder that dressing for yourself is its own form of luxury.
The set echoed the same mix of codes. Scenographer Marie-Anne Derville layered furniture and artworks across centuries—18th-century cabinetmaking, Art Deco seating, contemporary ceramics—mirroring the way the clothes blurred genres and eras.
If Vuitton’s past seasons have celebrated travel in the literal sense, this one suggested a different kind of journey: the kind that happens in private, when clothes don’t need an audience to feel decadent.
Of course, it wouldn’t be a Vuitton moment without a front row to match. Zendaya, Emma Stone, and Lisa of Blackpink turned the courtyard into its own spectacle, a reminder that even in the grandest setting, Ghesquière made staying in feel like the chicest act of all.