Dolce & Gabbana presented its Fall 2026 Ready-to-Wear collection in Milan on February 28, emphasizing the brand's enduring identity amid changes in Italian fashion. The show featured mostly black outfits with innovative tailoring and drew notable attention from guest Madonna. Designers Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana highlighted their commitment to recognizable style without following trends.
The Dolce & Gabbana Fall/Winter 2026-2027 women's collection opened with a video of black-and-white images underscoring the brand's legacy, as the designers marked 40 years since founding in 1985. "Many brands today lose completely their identity," Dolce said ahead of the show. "Our history is very long."
The runway showcased renewed hourglass jackets and coats where the back mirrored the front, complete with matching lapels and buttons. Models paused midway to twirl, highlighting the craftsmanship, including a man-size double-breasted blazer over a lacy silk camisole. The palette was predominantly black, broken by micro-print dresses inspired by a 1975 Helmut Newton photograph of model Lisa Taylor. Other elements included baggy ripped-denim jeans, satin bra-tops, sheer lace dresses revealing underwear, fake fur, crucifix earrings, and baker-boy hats.
Following controversy over the all-white casting in their January menswear show, more than a third of models here were women of color. "Our collections speak to us, our identity, our values," the designers said afterward. "We never wanted to follow trends." They aimed for "instantly recognisable" clothes associated with the brand.
Madonna, 67, attended as guest of honor, arriving late to her hit "You'll See" with boyfriend Akeem Morris and sitting next to Anna Wintour. She wore a black blazer over a dark minidress with turquoise leather gloves and hugged actor Alberto Guerra, who collaborated on a recent campaign. The collection echoed her early aesthetic with transparent lace and big-shouldered pinstriped suits reminiscent of her "Vogue" video. Post-show, the designers embraced her backstage amid hundreds of fans outside. Other front-row attendees included singers Hikaru Iwamoto, Choi San, and Achille Lauro.
The brand, known for past collaborations like Madonna's 1993 Girlie Show tour wardrobe and recent fragrance campaign, generates nearly €2bn in annual revenue despite historical controversies.