Sarah Burton turns Givenchy inward—and finds the future of menswear.

Fashion has spent the past decade performing for the street. Sarah Burton asks a different question: what happens when clothing stops asking to be seen and starts asking to be lived in?
For Spring/Summer 2027, Givenchy doesn’t stage a runway. It opens a door.
Inside the maison at 3 Avenue George V, Burton builds what she calls “a house within a house”: three rooms, three emotional states, three ways of understanding the modern wardrobe. The result isn’t theatrical. It’s intimate. The collection doesn’t arrive with noise—it whispers.
The vocabulary is radically familiar. A double-breasted jacket. Wide trousers. A white cotton shirt. A bomber. A leather perfecto. Garments so embedded in fashion history they risk becoming invisible. Burton’s gesture is to make us look again.
These aren’t basics. They’re archetypes.
Instead of reinventing menswear through disruption, she strips it back to its emotional architecture. Tailoring becomes a language of precision rather than power. Embroidery feels less decorative than autobiographical. Personal objects scattered throughout the presentation blur the line between wardrobe and memory, suggesting that luxury isn’t accumulation—it’s attachment.
Then comes the surprise.
Soft leather sportswear arrives in saturated color, injecting warmth into the collection without breaking its composure. Joy doesn’t explode; it settles into the silhouette.
The dialogue with artist Rachel Whiteread feels equally deliberate. Her practice has long been obsessed with the spaces objects leave behind, transforming absence into sculpture. Burton approaches clothing in much the same way. Rather than asking what fashion adds, she asks what remains. The person. The memory. The intimacy.
In an industry addicted to volume, Givenchy chooses proximity.
There’s an unexpected confidence in refusing spectacle. Burton doesn’t chase virality or nostalgia. She creates a wardrobe that feels inhabited before it’s even worn—a collection built around permanence rather than performance.
Perhaps that’s the real luxury today.
Not owning more.
Feeling at home in what you wear.





































