
Men’s fashion week(s) has just wrapped.
The last thirty years of menswear haven’t been afraid to play rough. From Helmut Lang to Balenciaga, with stops at Tom Ford, Raf Simons, and Gucci, these collections didn’t just dress men—they transformed them. Skinny fits that changed everything, sleek and powerful tailoring, theatrical oversized pieces, and conceptual garments that felt like wearable art. This isn’t just a list: it’s a journey through the moments that rewrote the rules of the male wardrobe, blending rebellion, elegance, and pure street attitude.
Helmut Lang – SS ’98
Minimal, sharp, technical. The OG of ’90s luxury streetwear.

Gucci (Tom Ford) – FW ’01
Sleek, sexy, power dressing. Redefined modern masculinity.

Dior Homme (Hedi Slimane) – SS ’02
Skinny fits that broke the rules. Rock-chic rebellion on the runway.

Prada – FW ’06
Technical fabrics meet tailoring. Menswear starts talking art.

Rick Owens – SS ’08
Goth glam, oversized drama, theatrical menswear unleashed.

Comme des Garçons Homme Plus – FW ’10
Conceptual cuts, layered chaos. Avant-garde manifesto in motion.

Louis Vuitton Men (Kim Jones) – FW ’13
Street + hip-hop + luxury. Supreme x LV vibes start here.

Gucci (Alessandro Michele) – FW ’15
Baroque, bold, inclusive. Statement menswear goes full force.

Raf Simons – SS ’16
Youth culture meets tailoring. Minimalist rebellion with edge.

Balenciaga (Demna Gvasalia) – SS ’18
Oversize madness, clunky kicks, ugly-chic rules the streets.





