Burberry closes London Fashion Week with wearable urban collection

Burberry's Fall/Winter 2026 show returned to London, marking the end of London Fashion Week with a focus on city nightlife. Creative director Daniel Lee presented luxurious yet practical pieces inspired by London's streets. The collection emphasized solid colors and classic silhouettes adapted for both day and night.

Burberry's Winter 2026 presentation took place inside the Old Billingsgate fish market, featuring a reconstruction of Tower Bridge to evoke London's urban landscape. After two seasons held in the countryside, the show shifted from escapism to the slick black tarmac and lamp-lit streets of the city. As chief creative officer Daniel Lee stated in a release, the collection is about “going out in a particularly London way.”

The designs balanced luxury with utility, described as more pared back and grounded in reality. For menswear, overcoats offered greater abundance and youthful ease, while tuxedos and silk shirts were styled with insouciance rather than rigidity. Functional staples like leather bombers, hoodies, and raincoats gained an evening-ready edge. The solid color palette provided “clothes for the night, as well as the day,” striking a balance between polish and practicality.

Women's looks included fluid trenches tossed over satin dresses, capturing the offhand confidence of London style. Fabrics played a key role, with raw-edged shearling, ruffled faille collars, and lambskin leather that gleamed like petrol on wet roads. Though the faille collars initially seemed fussy, the collection soon delivered wearable pieces that could elevate any wardrobe. Trench coats were abundant, true to Burberry's heritage, but plaid was minimal, with almost no signature beige tartan.

Accompanied by a soundtrack from FKA twigs, the show captured the buzz of nocturnal London. Lee reflected, “We all walk the same roads. We’re all lit by the same streetlamps. We all feel the same buzz of the city at night.” The result made the city's shared energy feel democratic, seductive, and metropolitan. Celebrity attendees included Kate and Lila Moss, Lim Yoona, Daisy Edgar-Jones, Camille Rowe, Joe Locke, Leo Woodall, Lou Doillon, and others.

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Realistic image of Shanghai Fashion Week FW26 runway with models in animal prints and pinks, celebrating strong sales and feminine trends.
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Shanghai Fashion Week FW26 shifts to refined femininity and strong sales

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Shanghai Fashion Week for fall/winter 2026 concluded with Glenn Martens' Maison Margiela runway show, marking a confident phase for Chinese fashion amid economic challenges. Designers moved away from minimalism toward expressive femininity, romanticism, and cultural nuance, with bold trends like animal prints and vibrant pinks dominating runways. Buyers placed disciplined orders, while livestream sales exceeded RMB 20 million.

Street style at the fall 2026 fashion week collections drew from real-world inspirations, contrasting the runway fantasies of the prior spring season. Influences included Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy looks and Celine designs by Michael Rider. Observers noted trends like shaggy textures, leopard prints, and specific accessories across New York and Paris shows.

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Building on the key collections and trends from Paris Fashion Week Fall/Winter 2026, as previously covered, the event drew a star-studded crowd of celebrities serving as brand ambassadors and style influencers. Front-row appearances built hype for the Oscars red carpet, while a runway controversy and collaborations added edge to the proceedings.

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