At Paris Fashion Week, 82-year-old designer Yohji Yamamoto presented his fall 2026 ready-to-wear collection, drawing inspiration from Japanese kimonos and artist Katsushika Hokusai. The show at Hôtel de Ville featured draped silhouettes and vibrant prints, encouraging guests to observe without recording. Yamamoto emphasized ongoing creativity amid global concerns.
Yohji Yamamoto's fall 2026 ready-to-wear show took place at Hôtel de Ville during Paris Fashion Week on March 6, 2026. Greeting cards on seats urged attendees to absorb the runway experience with their eyes rather than phones, a signature touch from the 82-year-old designer.
The collection reimagined traditional Japanese dress through modern kimonos that blended reverence and rebellion. Silhouettes flowed with liberated drapery, featuring knotted fabrics, contrasting textiles, and robes built on a black foundation. Vibrant prints from Edo-period artist Katsushika Hokusai added bursts of color, including flamingo motifs and psychedelic stripes, layered with jacquard textures and subtle plaids. Fabrics ranged from indigo cotton and flannel to velvet, silk crêpe, damask weaves, and linens, highlighting Japan's weaving industry.
Garments swaddled models without constriction, with cloth tied high on shoulders, slung low from behind, or crisscrossed in shawls. Skirts flowed and folded, while volume bunched and released intuitively. Deconstructed earthy plaid looks evoked grunge, contrasted by coils of striped fabric and delicate lace reminiscent of Van Dongen portraits. Canvas tennis shoes incorporated geta thong strips, and vertical hair nests created halo effects under stage lights.
Yamamoto drew parallels to Hokusai, who innovated until his death and influenced European artists like Monet through Japonisme. Backstage, he noted, “If I don’t do [this], I get bored, you know? We have to—we, not [just] me—always be creating, and we need this passion.” He described Hokusai's work as “very exciting, very surprising,” adding with a twinkle, “But his daughter was helping him,” near his own daughter Limi Yamamoto.
The finale featured five models in austere knits and wooden geta footwear, with towering hair and delicate layers. Yamamoto remarked on the present world's challenges: “too many wars, I don’t like it.” He suggested the street-ready looks would appear “strange,” signaling a shift from prior collections addressing climate change and war.