At Milano Men Fashion Week SS26, Ssheena made a sharp and unapologetic return to the runway, presenting a Spring/Summer 2026 collection that pulsed with raw clarity and a refined edge. Helmed by Sabrina Mandelli, the brand delivered an aesthetic rooted in urban discipline—where streetwear morphs into tailoring, and emotion simmers beneath every sharp line and controlled silhouette.
For Spring/Summer 2026, Fiorucci lit up Milano Men’s Fashion Week with a collection that felt like a love letter to the brand’s iconic past—filtered through the lens of today’s street-smart, style-savvy generation. It was a show that balanced pop exuberance with crisp Italian tailoring, weaving together heritage and hype in a way that felt effortlessly fresh.
In a season dominated by spectacle and noise, Etro chose stillness—and in doing so, spoke volumes. For Spring/Summer 2026, the Italian house invited guests into its Milan headquarters rather than a conventional runway, offering an experience steeped in reflection, intimacy, and artisanal reverence. It was less a show, more a meditation—a graceful reaffirmation of the house’s roots, proving that evolution doesn’t always require reinvention.
At the historic Villa Litta in Lainate, Rowen Rose transported its audience into an otherworldly spa of myth and style. The Spring/Summer 2026 collection—unveiled in the villa’s baroque nymphaeum—was no ordinary fashion show; it was a procession through a living dream, where mythology, ritual, and modern refinement converged.
At Milano Men’s Fashion Week, Ungaro made a graceful turn toward serene sophistication with its Spring/Summer 2026 menswear collection under Philippe Paubert. This season wasn’t about disruption or reinvention—it was about refinement. Paubert gently eased the house’s signature elegance into a more casual, lived-in rhythm, marrying Mediterranean ease with Parisian polish.
Unfolding with poetic resonance at Milano Men’s Fashion Week SS26, the Emporio Armani Spring Summer 2026 menswear show marked both a personal and creative milestone. Though Giorgio Armani, now 91, was absent from the runway for the first time since founding his house in 1975—due to a brief illness—his presence was deeply felt. Every look, every detail, every thread bore his unmistakable signature. Via FaceTime, he remained intimately involved backstage, proving that even from a distance, his vision guided the show like a steady compass.





