Ihre Tasche ist leer
Weiter einkaufenBalmain
FALL-WINTER 2026 FASHION SHOW
Balmain invites you to discover Antonin Tron’s first collection.
Every house is built on foundations, and for Balmain’s new Creative Director Antonin Tron, the foundations of his Balmain are to be found in 1945 when Pierre Balmain established his maison in Paris at a time of profound social and cultural change. Drawing on Balmain’s origins isn’t an exercise in nostalgia for the past, but one of finding contemporary relevance and reality in the archives as emblematic of a living, breathing present.
Antonin Tron identifies with a house which he sees as from the very beginning exalting a body-enhancing, architectural view of the female form, one reflective of a whole new world for women, focused on dynamism, sensuality, and an opulence which felt modern in its restraint. Fall 2026 puts Antonin Tron’s stamp on the near provocative eroticism of Spring 1946, the draping techniques of Spring 1953, as well as the emancipatory tailoring represented by Balmain’s iconic pilot jacket which has become an aerodynamic-like leitmotif for the collection.
Antonin Tron’s first collection sets out his vision and states his ambition: embracing a corporeal dynamism; a more pragmatic and everyday vision of glamour, which feels lighter, freer and easier to move in; and, an honouring of the house’s haute couture beginnings, with him emphasizing artisanal craft and developing new iterations of the most luxurious fabrics, which are designed to be sumptuous but not overbearingly so. Satin, velvet, shearling, jacquard cloque, leather and lace, come in a nocturnal colour palette of black hues, as well as shades of purple and green which evoke a natural richness.
The interplay of construction made lighter, and draping made more fluid, is important, as is the emphasis on the strength of sensuality, and the sensuality of strength. Antonin Tron is passionate about the strong-shouldered dark elegance and prowling sexuality of the heroines of 1940s film noir as well as their spiritual sisters of the neo-noir movies of the 1980s. The setting for the show is itself cinematic. Designed by Berlin-based architect Andrea Faraguna, recently awarded a Golden Lion at the Venice Architecture Biennale, the scenography evolves from a nocturnal landscape to light-filled atmosphere, ushering in a new era for Balmain.