Dolce and Gabbana Spring Summer 2016 in Milan was not subtle. It was expansive. Generous. Almost cinematic in scope. A standard large Dolce and Gabbana menswear outing in the sense that it gave you everything. And then a little more.
-
-
Costume National Menswear S/S 2016 Milan
Costume National Spring Summer 2016 in Milan felt like a cool kid flipping through old Polaroids from 1987 and deciding to reinterpret them with better tailoring. The collection dabbled in formalwear, yes, but it did so with a boldness that hinted at an 80s after dark energy. Not costume. Not parody. Just attitude.
-
Moschino Menswear S/S 2016
Jeremy Scott does not design quietly. For Moschino Menswear Spring Summer 2016, he staged a collision no one saw coming. Nascar speed collided with Royal Victorian opulence. The result was loud, theatrical, and unapologetically fun.
-
Tiger Of Sweden Menswear S/S 2016 London
Tiger of Sweden Spring Summer 2016 in London took a silhouette rooted in rebellion and gave it a youthful refresh. The reference point was clear. The 1940s zoot suit. Big attitude. Strong lines. A little swagger. But instead of going full period piece, the brand distilled it into something boyish, modern, and surprisingly light on its feet.
-
Bobby Abley Menswear S/S 2016 London
Bobby Abley Spring Summer 2016 in London did not flirt with pop culture. It cannonballed into it. This season was a full throttle love letter to Star Wars, delivered with Abley’s signature mischief and zero fear of looking unserious. If fashion is meant to be fun, this was the thesis statement.
-
Burberry Prorsum S/S 2016 London
Burberry Prorsum Spring Summer 2016 in London asked a simple question. What happens when you take fabrics usually reserved for streetwear bravado and place them in a formal setting? The answer, under Christopher Bailey’s direction, was unexpectedly romantic.
-
E. Tautz Menswear S/S 2016 London
E. Tautz Spring Summer 2016 in London did not need theatrics. No heavy concept. No pop culture wink. Just pure, distilled style. Patrick Grant leaned into a 1950s reference point and refined it to its cleanest form. The result felt effortless, but do not be fooled. Effortless like this takes discipline.
-
KTZ Menswear S/S 2016 London
KTZ Menswear S/S 2016 London is all about the energy of the streets amplified into high-fashion intensity. Athletic, synthetic, and undeniably sexy, the collection merges performance wear with a runway-ready sensibility. Every look feels like it could move seamlessly from the catwalk to a high-octane urban adventure, combining functionality with style.
-
Dunhill Menswear S/S 2016 London
Dunhill Menswear S/S 2016 London channels classic menswear with a modern twist. Designer John Ray explores the extremes of formalwear while seamlessly transitioning into relaxed, yacht-ready elegance. The collection feels meticulously curated, with each look reflecting a balance of heritage and contemporary style.
-
Alexander McQueen Menswear S/S 2016 London
Alexander McQueen Menswear S/S 2016 London is a study in understated drama and structural elegance. The collection balances formal tailoring with ethereal movement, offering garments that feel simultaneously commanding and delicate. It is McQueen at his signature best—boldly architectural yet refined, with each piece carefully considered to impress in both shape and detail.
-
James Long Menswear S/S 2016 London
James Long Menswear S/S 2016 London is flamboyant, imaginative, and unapologetically fun. The collection turns layering, patchwork, and pattern mixing into a playground for creativity, proving that menswear can be just as adventurous and expressive as womenswear. Each look feels intentional, yet lively, capturing a sense of humor and boldness that is hard to ignore.