
There was a time when Vetements broke fashion by making the ordinary feel radical. Today, Guram Gvasalia proves the formula still works—not by screaming louder, but by twisting reality just enough to make you question it.
For its first-ever appearance on the Paris Men’s Fashion Week calendar, Vetements traded spectacle for precision. Staged inside a stark underground tunnel beneath Paris, the Spring Summer 2027 collection dissected the modern workplace with the cold detachment of an anthropologist and the dry humor of someone who’s already quit the job.
Everything looked familiar, until it didn’t.
The executive suit arrived with raw-cut sleeves. Shirt hems escaped neatly belted trousers. Ties were worn backwards, transforming one of menswear’s oldest symbols of authority into something strangely dysfunctional. Corporate uniforms, office hierarchies and business dress codes weren’t rejected—they were quietly hacked from the inside.
That’s where this collection succeeds. Vetements no longer relies on shock value. Instead, it weaponizes subtle disruption. A reversed construction. An unfinished edge. A proportion shifted just enough to make the eye uncomfortable. Clothes become visual glitches, exposing how fragile our ideas of power, professionalism and normality really are.
The tailoring is sharper than it has been in seasons, while gender feels increasingly irrelevant. Structured jackets, pencil skirts, oversized coats and sheer organza move effortlessly between men’s and women’s wardrobes, dissolving categories without making a statement out of it. At Vetements, identity isn’t announced anymore—it’s simply worn.
Perhaps the most unexpected evolution is restraint. The oversized excess that once defined the house has been refined into something cleaner, more controlled, almost corporate itself. Ironically, by embracing the language of uniforms, Guram finds new ways to question conformity.
And then came Sharon Stone.
Closing the show in an oversized white blazer, a black shirt, a backwards tie and patent thigh-high boots, she didn’t just make a cameo—she became the collection’s final act of inversion. One of cinema’s most enduring symbols of power and seduction walked not as a nostalgic icon, but as living proof that disruption doesn’t age. It simply changes dress code.
Vetements Spring Summer 2027 doesn’t reinvent the wardrobe. It quietly rewires it. Sometimes, the most subversive gesture isn’t creating something new. It’s making everything you already know feel slightly, brilliantly wrong.
















































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