By Raquel Fernand

For Spring/Summer 2026, Proenza Schouler offered not a declaration but a whisper — a prelude to a new chapter. Only a week before the show, the house announced the appointment of Rachel Scott, founder of Diotima, as creative director, following the departure of Jack McCollough and Lazaro Hernandez, who journeyed to Loewe in Paris earlier this year. Conceived with the in-house studio, the collection unfolded less as presentation than as invocation: a first gesture toward evolution, where threads loosen and surfaces shift.
“The act of evolution demands a soft undoing,” the notes read.
A grey mélange blazer inverted itself, shoulder pads exposed, seams raw. The reverse of a jacquard revealed its hidden threads, detaching into ornament. From the archive, coated cotton reemerged — not printed but laser- cut, its form removed rather than applied. Fabric found its own rhythm, in sync with the body.
Dresses in black and seaglass seemed caught mid-motion, chrysanthemum motifs refracted like images glimpsed through glass. Patterns blurred, fabrics creased and frayed, carrying the imprint of what has passed. Desire flickered in fleeting details: a fur sandal, an organza thigh- high boot veiling the leg, a knitted short laying skin bare.
Color moved like memory — orange into marigold, marigold into seaglass — spontaneity radiating across the runway. Everywhere, textures and gestures mattered more than polish.
“A cut, a twist, a release: these are all first gestures suspended between what endures and what evolves. Currents amassed, defiant of resolution. The story will be written over time.”
In SS26, Proenza Schouler did not close a chapter. It opened one.
One suspended in ellipsis, where memory binds itself to possibility.
































