Spanish model Miriam Sánchez opened Carolina Herrera‘s Spring 2026 runway show on Thursday in Madrid’s Plaza Mayor, a presentation with which Wes Gordon, the brand’s creative director, sought to pen a love letter to the city, which he described as a place of striking contrasts, character and great beauty.
Carolina Herrera fashion show in Madrid – @carolinaherrera
It was the first time the brand had shown a main collection outside New York and the third international presentation, after Rio de Janeiro and Mexico, in its 44-year history.
The ties of the brand’s founder, Carolina Herrera, and her family to Spain, especially her daughter Carolina Adriana, who lives there with her children, were instrumental in the decision to hold this fashion show in the heart of Habsburg Madrid, not forgetting that the brand is part of the Spanish group Puig.
The square has hosted everything from popular celebrations to coronations, bullfights and beatifications, but never until now a runway show, which drew onlookers and tourists who settled on the square’s café terraces to enjoy a luxury catwalk with a front-row view.
Others appeared on balconies, in attic windows and even on rooftops, and many pressed against the barriers surrounding the cordoned-off area.
It was a place that Gordon fell in love with and transformed with pale pink gazebos, where guests were seated and happily sang along to the all-Spanish soundtrack that accompanied the show.
International Spanish models including Esther Cañadas, Blanca Padilla and Maika Merino took to a runway stretching over a kilometre, in designs that captured quintessential Madrid and the fine workmanship of its artisans, conceived for a global woman.
Carolina Herrera’s fashion show at Plaza Mayor in Madrid – @carolinaherrera
“Madrid has always been one of my favourite cities in the world, rich in history, art and culture,” said the designer, who was inspired by the city’s rhythm, its appetite for life, its energy that “connects deeply with the Herrera woman”.
The collection pays tribute to women such as Paloma Picasso and Cayetana Fitz-James Stuart, Duchess of Alba, figures that embody, for the designer, drama and modernity.
The models traversed the central area of the square in looks featuring three floral motifs emblematic of Madrid: the carnation, rendered in embroidery and jacquards; the violet, a nod to the city’s signature sweets with three-dimensional embroideries; and the Retiro rose, cultivated in the park’s historic rose garden.
Gordon sought to capture on fabric the palette of Goya’s skies and the chromatic intensity of Almodóvar’s films, playing with saffron tones that rise to Herrera red before deepening into burgundy; the electric pink of Madrid’s blazing sunsets; lilac-violet; pure white; and black, as in the spectacular dress that opened the show.
Bullfighting references appeared in silhouettes with hip volumes evoking a torero’s montera, and in fitted trousers recalling Goyesque breeches.
Gordon also nodded to Madrid at its most traditional with sleeves inspired by chulapa dresses—strong shoulders, cinched waists and ruffled skirts—reinterpreted through the Herrera lens.
The collection was a true ode to the city in its textures as well: wool in checks that echoed the cobblestones of the Plaza Mayor; airy lace recalling the mantillas sold in shops on the square; and Lurex lattice embroideries evoking the grilles on its windows.
The brand stayed true to its passion for polka dots, a highly personal code in every collection, with ruffled dresses defined by sculptural lines.
As on other occasions when Carolina Herrera has shown outside New York, the house enriched its offering with special collaborations with local artisans, which in this case highlighted Spanish craftsmanship.
Such was the case of Sybilla, who brought her avant-garde sensibility to three dresses that dovetailed with Carolina Herrera’s DNA, drawing on her personal “invisible thread” and singular approach to pattern-cutting.
Palomo reinterpreted the brand’s iconic white shirt, adding ruffled collars and nods to vintage tailoring, blending his romanticism with the house’s clean lines.
Capas Seseña, a classic in the history of Madrid, founded in 1901, paid tribute to dandyism and to the style of Reinaldo Herrera, Carolina’s husband who died in March this year, with a garment the couple always loved to wear.
Andrés Gallardo, a master of porcelain jewellery, crafted brooches, earrings and pendants inspired by the carnation, the emblematic flower of San Isidro, with pearls predominating; while the firm Levens, specialising in glass jewellery with organic shapes, adorned several looks with petals and droplets of water.
The day ended with a party at which the brand unveiled its new fragrance, La Bomba, fronted by model Vittoria Ceretti.
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Fine jewellery brand Senco Gold & Diamonds has expanded its men’s offering and launched new brand ‘Aham,’ designed to cater to modern Indian grooms with a range of gold, diamond, and platinum options.
A look from Senco Gold & Diamonds’ new brand Aham – Senco Gold & Diamonds – Facebook
“Aham draws inspiration from the evolving equal relationships of modern Indian couples where the groom’s style is now as significant as the bride’s,” said Senco Gold & Diamonds’ director and head of marketing and designs Joita Sen in a press release. “What we’ve seen in most Indian weddings so far is the groom looking on indulgently as his better half glitters in her wedding jewellery. With Aham, we wanted to change that narrative and have the couple dazzle equally in their Senco adornments! Each piece of this collection allows the groom the freedom to express his personal style, most naturally and effortlessly.”
Now available in Senco Gold & Diamonds’ pan-India brick-and-mortar stores, online, and on the Senco shopping app, Aham’s ‘Wedding Season Collection’ presents a contemporary take on traditional wedding jewellery. The label’s maiden collection features over 800 designs including kadas, platinum wristwear, diamond-set rings, and more minimalist cufflinks, along with a selection of fusion pieces in two-tone styles.
Senco Gold & Diamonds’ parent company Senco Gold Limited was incorporated in Kolkata in 1994, according to its website. The business counts over 175 stores in India.
Gucci owner Kering and private equity firm Ardian said on Tuesday they had completed a joint venture agreement for a New York property deal valued at $900 million.
Kering’s brands include Saint Laurent, Gucci, and Balenciaga – Reuters
Under the deal concluded earlier this year, Kering is contributing the property at 715-717 Fifth Avenue in New York to a newly created joint venture with Ardian, the companies said in a joint statement. Ardian will hold a 60% stake in this, with Kering retaining 40% and receiving $690 million in net proceeds.
The transaction is part of Kering’s broader strategy to secure control of high-profile retail locations while also raising cash. In January, Kering said it had transferred three of its Paris real estate assets to a new joint venture with Ardian, freeing up 837 million euros in proceeds.
“Like the investment agreement already signed in Paris, this transaction allows us to secure another long term highly prominent retail location for our houses while enhancing our financial flexibility,” said Kering chief operating officer Jean-Marc Duplaix, commenting on the New York Ardian deal.
London’s Selfridges continues to be the pop-up destination of choice in London’s West End (Harrods has that status in Knightsbridge) and one of the world’s best known labels will be there as of January.
Dior
Dior, which already has a strong presence in the London flagship will be unveiling its first pop-up boutique for its new summer 2026 creations inside the in-demand Corner Shop.
That’s important because it will celebrate the launch of Jonathan Anderson’s first collection.
Running from 8 January to 28 February, the unique space will “reveal a playful world like a waking dream”. The company said the summer 2026 menswear collection “breathes a certain spontaneity into the art of dressing, while the womenswear line radiates freshness, with leather goods presented alongside exquisite creations. An exceptional selection that expresses the reinvented essence of Dior”.
Dior is currently inviting customers to book appointments and said it will “extend the experience through a curated selection of exclusive events at the pop-up boutique”.
That includes notebook personalisation with “a nod to Versailles-style gilding, personalised detailing applied by an expert [that] promises to add a truly signature touch”. And there’s also bookmark calligraphy where visitors can add their initials to a bookmark, inspired by the newest Dior Book Tote designs by Anderson.
The news of the pop-up comes in the same week that Dior unveiled its super-sized flagship concept House of Dior Beijing. That five-storey space dwarfs the Selfridges space but underscores the ambitious plans LVMH has for the brand, the huge investment Dior is putting into its global growth and its targeting of key luxury markets.