Michael Rider presented his third collection as Celine's creative director at Paris Fashion Week, staging the fall/winter 2026 ready-to-wear show in a wooden venue behind the Institut de France. Emphasizing intuition over concepts and slimmer silhouettes with edge, the lineup drew from a daily Paris commute for wearable tailoring and eccentric details that celebrate personal style.
The Celine fall/winter 2026 ready-to-wear show occurred on March 9, 2026, during Paris Fashion Week, in a giant wooden box set in a courtyard behind the Institut de France, evoking a bright attic-like space. Creative director Michael Rider, an American designer, marked his third outing with the brand, shifting from previous preppy influences like silk scarves and rugby shirts toward succinct, body-hugging lines that signal the end of oversized trends.
In show notes, Rider wrote: “Confidence. Being upfront about it. Speaking about style without irony. Intuition over strategy. Feeling it rather than planning it. Sharpening the pencil. Rejecting the idea of a ‘concept.’” He described the approach as 'building out a life in clothes,' with 'classics' infused with 'bite' to reflect 'messy inner lives' rather than cover them up. Inspired by a daily commute in Paris, the collection prioritizes customer-friendly, democratic designs that work on the runway and in real life, blending Parisian roots with LVMH appeal.
The show opened with a tailored black coat and matching hat adorned with a pin reading 'bienvenue chez Celine.' Highlights included sharp architectural tailoring—long coats, blazers, French peacoats, narrow longline overcoats—paired with cropped kick-flare trousers and slim pants. Peplum silhouettes added structure, while eccentric touches brought flair: heavy chainmail under outerwear, mismatched statement earrings, sculptural leather scarves, satin mufflers obscuring necks, odd feather crowns in hair, abnormally small gold buttons, and white satin echoes of Phoebe Philo's 2013 collection with bow-accented tunics.
Color bursts featured a rich purple leather coat amid darker palettes, alongside charm necklaces over crisp shirting, patterns, logos, and embellishments. Accessories encompassed wide-brimmed bowler/derby and bucket hats, squishy plimsolls, kitten-heel granny boots, often in white. Music from Prince, The West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band, and Pastor T.L. Barrett and The Youth for Christ Orchestra amplified a groovy '70s jam-session vibe, mirroring Rider's collaborative studio process: 'Everybody's riffing on each other.'
Overall, the lineup merges old and new Parisian codes into an urgent, dreamy wardrobe for self-expression with emotional impact, positioning Celine as a destination for beautifully cut, aspirationally relatable clothing.