Silvana Armani debuted her first solo Giorgio Armani women's collection on March 1, 2026, closing Milan Fashion Week with a fluid and essential lineup honoring her late uncle's legacy. The Fall/Winter 2026-2027 ready-to-wear show featured tailored suits, wide-leg trousers, and soft jackets, reflecting a woman's perspective on wearability. Actor Andie MacDowell attended the front row, praising the designs for representing women of a certain age.
Silvana Armani, niece of the late Giorgio Armani and now creative director of the women's collections, presented her milestone show on Sunday, March 1, 2026, in Milan, Italy. This marked the first signature Giorgio Armani collection without the founder's input, following his death on September 4, 2025, at age 91. At 70, Silvana Armani, who has worked at the company for 40 years, took her bows in a navy sweater and trousers, emphasizing simplicity.
The collection opened with gray cashmere flannel suits, loose of leg and long of jacket, accessorized with brooches shaped like a lion's head for her Leo sign and a crab for Giorgio's Cancer sign. Tailored forms dominated the early looks, including dark flannel, pale pants, and off-red belts, with asymmetry in double-breasted shawls and triple pleats at the shoulders. Three-button blousons in cashmere and shearling appeared in Looks 6 and 23, while only Look 3 featured a kangaroo-pocket flannel dress without pants.
The middle section blended militarywear and East Asian influences, with kimono-collared silk-lined jackets, fitted quilted silk-satin shirt-jackets with faux-fur detailing, embroidered patches, and chinoiserie silk jacquard. A remixed bomber jacket in Look 34 expanded proportions for easy élan. Colors shifted to burgundy, midnight blue, navy, white, khaki, and greige, with soft tailored jackets as the backbone, complemented by fluid trousers with side pleats, winter white high-neck blouses, anoraks, and cozy knitwear.
Eveningwear included velvet looks with beaded embroidery, iridescent corsets, long burgundy dresses with racer-backs, and roomy velvet suits. Cross-body bags and low heels suggested practicality. Silvana Armani said after the show, “Working with fluidity and simplicity came naturally to me, because that’s how I am.” Earlier, she told Vogue, “Dressing a woman is more complex than dressing a man. Yet as a woman, you know your body.”
Front-row guest Andie MacDowell, 67, wore a dark Armani suit with a three-dimensional rose and said, “One of the things that is really important to me is representing women of a certain age, and showing that we still are fashionable and powerful and strong.” The show closed with Mina performing “A Costo di Morire,” a lament of lost love. Six months after Giorgio's death, the brand, the world's biggest private luxury fashion house, remains for sale, with potential buyers including LVMH, Luxottica, and L’Oréal.