Mist, Marble, and Modernism by Thom Browne for F/W 26-27, New York Fashion Week | FashionTV | FTV

Feb 21, 2026Channel
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Published3 months ago
Duration20:56
Video IDDFtd8-lSFqQ
Languageen
CategoryHowto & Style
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeRegular Video

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Views238
Likes16
Comments1
Engagement Rate7.14%
Likes per 100 views6.72
Comments per 1K views4.20

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Lean in and witness the re-birth of the American icon: Thom Browne is going back to where the hemlines began! "Everything old is new again," the designer mused, and indeed, the collection was a masterful "reintroduction" of the silhouettes that defined his twenty-five-year reign. After decades of pushing the grey suit into the realms of the conceptual and the surreal, Browne returned to the sanctity of the sack jacket and the skinny trousers. It was a palate cleanser of the highest order, reminding the fashion faithful that beneath the whimsy lies a foundation of impeccable, "real" clothes—investment pieces crafted with embroidery and construction that defy the seasonal churn. The atmosphere was nothing short of operatic. As Yahya Abdul-Mateen II sat beneath Rodin's "The Three Shades," reading the haunting verses of Dante's Inferno, the runway became a bridge between the athletic and the aesthetic. NFL superstars Marcus Allen, Justin Jefferson, and Deandre Hopkins traded the gridiron for the catwalk, donning tailored parkas and blouson flight jackets in waterproof cashmere with the grace of seasoned voyagers. While the Nantucket scenes and shark motifs provided a wink of Browne's signature eccentricity, the true crescendo arrived in the final looks: a wide-shouldered trench in ethereal grey tulle and a double-breasted Chesterfield cape in boiled wool, both shimmering with gunmetal beaded degrade. It was a reminder that while Browne may be returning to his roots, his vision remains firmly planted in the heavens. For Thom Browne, the grey suit isn't just a garment; it is a timeless, evolving soul.

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