On February 9, Marc Jacobs unveiled its Fall/Winter 2026 collection ahead of the official opening of New York Fashion Week on February 11.
The show took place at the Park Avenue Armory, a venue deeply tied to the brand’s history. The vast space was stripped back to its bare essentials, with little more than seating and stark spotlights illuminating the room. At the center sat a folding table and chairs, topped only by a small artwork depicting a single flower—quietly and solemnly setting the tone for a collection shaped by themes of memory and loss.

What “Memory. Loss.” Signals
This season’s collection was titled Memory. Loss.
In his show notes, Jacobs described memory not as something to be romanticized through nostalgia, but as a force that shapes present and future actions.
“The act of recovering the past reminds us that loss is inevitable, and that hope is work.”
That philosophy ran through the structure of the entire collection, guiding both its visual language and emotional undercurrent.
Silhouettes That Do Not Center the Body Line
Across all looks, a clear design approach emerged: silhouettes that intentionally removed emphasis from the body’s natural curves. Dresses and coats fell straight down the frame, avoiding defined waists or accentuated hips. Mini skirts sat high on the torso, forming near-square shapes around the body. The relationship between tops and bottoms was not about flattering the figure, but about foregrounding clothing as structure.
This was not a distortion for decoration’s sake. Rather, it posed a quiet challenge to the long-held assumption that fashion must contour or celebrate the body, offering a subtle resistance to conventional ideals of fit and beauty.


The 1990s as Memory, the Present as Form
Throughout the collection, colors and details evoked the late 1990s and early 2000s: beaded collars, pom-pom heels, semi-sheer fabrics, and restrained flashes of neon. Yet these elements were never presented as nostalgic references. Instead, they were repositioned within contemporary constructions, functioning not as symbols of a past era but as fragments of memory.
This approach reflected Jacobs’s process for the season, which involved revisiting pivotal moments in fashion history and his own career while designing the 39-look lineup. References ranged from Yves Saint Laurent’s 1965 couture work to Jacobs’s own Spring/Summer 1993 grunge collection during his Perry Ellis era, as well as Marc by Marc Jacobs Spring/Summer 2013. These phases were not replicated, but absorbed and reinterpreted.
Classic items such as knits, suits, checks, and tweeds were similarly treated. Avoiding exaggeration or heavy-handed reinvention, they were calmly reconstructed—carrying historical context while remaining firmly grounded in the present.



Sincerity Over Experimentation
Compared to the sculptural, almost fantastical silhouettes Jacobs has presented in recent seasons, Fall/Winter 2026 felt noticeably restrained. But this was not a retreat. Rather, it marked a shift toward a more introspective and sincere phase of expression.
Instead of escapism or fantasy, the collection focused on confronting the past and moving forward with it intact. That attitude was consistently communicated across all 39 looks.


The Quiet Weight of the Finale
Even in the finale, there was no dramatic crescendo or ornamental climax. The collection concluded calmly, with a sense of quiet resolve.
That restraint felt like the most accurate response to the theme of Memory. Loss.
Looking back is not about indulging in sentimentality. It is about choosing what we lose, what we keep, and what we carry forward.
This season, Marc Jacobs articulated that process with striking honesty—using fashion as a direct and unfiltered medium.
See all looks from the Marc Jacobs Fall/Winter 2026 collection in the gallery below.
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