Spanish designer David Catalán, whose eponymous label is registered in Porto, and Portuguese designer Miguel Vieira once again took to the runway at Milan Fashion Week, supported by Portugal Fashion. According to the organisers of the Portuguese project, the initiative was included in the official show calendar of Italy’s fashion capital, one of the most important stages in the global industry. Their autumn/winter 2026/2027 collections were presented at Fondazione Sozzani on the morning of Monday, January 19, one following the other.
Foto: Filippo Fior
While the “ASSEMBLED” collection marks David Catalán’s new approach to construction and functionality, the ‘A Tea in the Desert’ line “brings Miguel Vieira’s vision inspired by Bernardo Bertolucci’s The Sheltering Sky,” Portugal Fashion said in a statement.
“ASSEMBLED is the title of David Catalán’s collection for autumn/winter 26/27. The concept draws on the logic of traditional patchwork blankets, looking to their principles of construction, reinforcement, and layering as practical responses to cold, wear, and continued use,” the note explains. “Those principles are translated into menswear through panelled cuts, contrasting materials, and structured silhouettes, creating a winter wardrobe designed to be combined, adapted and worn in day-to-day life.”
“The pieces function as layered systems, with each element playing a specific role within the whole, combining structural rigour with a contemporary approach to menswear, and focusing on functionality, durability, and versatility.”
Foto: Filippo Fior
On his social media channels, David Catalán writes: “Inside the studio and in factories, where streetwear meets the precision of tailoring and youthful instinct intersects with craftsmanship, @davidcatalanbrand shapes a contemporary, fluid, and deeply personal voice.”
“Born in Spain, Catalán chose Porto as his base on arriving to study fashion- a city that has become integral to the growth of his brand and creative identity. Today, his work reflects an intercultural journey, combining relaxed tailoring, utilitarian elements, and a modern approach to menswear, rooted in quality and experimentation,” the post further explains, announcing that in Milan, “David Catalán takes to the runway at @milanfashionweek, representing Portugal via the Portugal Fashion platform. The ‘Assembled’ collection unfolds as a reflection on construction, layering and the dialogue between function and form- a collection that captures the energy of a new generation of menswear.”
Foto: Filippo Fior
“A statement shaped by versatility, movement and the freedom to build one’s identity through clothes,” the brand adds, underscoring: “Assembled. Versatility in every layer. Freedom in every step”.
Miguel Vieira then presented the ‘A Tea in the Desert’ collection, inspired by Bernardo Bertolucci’s film The Sheltering Sky, developed “from the arid landscapes of North Africa and the emotional intensity of the protagonists, translating these references into a tailoring proposal marked by contrasting textures, volumes and atmospheres.”
Foto: Isidore Montag
“The silhouette oscillates between structured shapes and more fluid lines, creating a constant tension between restraint and freedom,” it continues. “The colour palette includes ecru, beige, camel, brown, pink, and black, rendered in materials such as flannel, silk, alpaca, cashmere, fur, wool, and sequins. Details include prints developed in the atelier and hand-braided flannel, with accessories such as scarves, ties, and bags completing the collection.”
On its social media channels, the eponymous Miguel Vieira brand highlights “A Tea in the Desert. Rigor in every cut. Sensitivity in every detail”, reads a post on @miguelvieiraofficial, shared with @portugalfashion.
Foto: Isidore Montag
“Inside the atelier, where precision defines each line and tailoring becomes language, @miguelvieiraofficial continues a career shaped by mastery, discipline, and vision,” another publication explains. “With decades of close collaboration with the textile industry, the designer refines silhouettes that have long defined contemporary menswear. Each piece reflects a commitment to structure, detail, and the discreet confidence of impeccable tailoring”.
It further previews, in Milan, ‘A Tea in the Desert’, which reveals itself as “a new chapter in a work dedicated to men’s fashion, where rigour meets sensitivity and experience is transformed into expression.” In short: “A collection rooted in tailoring, elevated by time and guided by an enduring dialogue between fabric and form.”
Foto: Isidore Montag
After Milan, Portugal Fashion moves on to Paris and, subsequently, Copenhagen, continuing the autumn/winter 2026/2027 season with a series of actions aimed at buyers, the media, and industry professionals. This reinforces the presence of creations developed in Portugal across Europe’s main fashion centres, the organisation behind the Portuguese passerelle notes, as it invests beyond borders to take Portuguese talent and fashion labels further afield.
Portugal Fashion is a project run by ANJE- National Association of Young Entrepreneurs- with the support of its strategic partners and co-financed by SIAC- Support for Collective Actions- Internationalisation of Portugal 2030, within the scope of Compete 2030- Innovation and Digital Transition Programme- with funds from the European Union, through the European Regional Development Fund.
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Jeanne Friot: a queer manifesto to rouse Fashion Week
With her “Awake” show, Jeanne Friot literally brought her guests to their feet at the Théâtre du Rond-Point des Champs-Élysées. Making her debut on the official calendar, the French designer opened the Paris proceedings with a high-octane performance that, true to form, championed LGBTQI+ causes.
The unveiling of Jeanne Friot’s Autumn/Winter 2026 collection, blending runway and choreography conceived with choreographer Maud Le Pladec and the Ballet de Lorraine company, could not have felt more timely given recent headlines and the American president’s posturing. The thirty-something designer issued a call to wake up, with several dancers wearing T-shirts emblazoned with the slogan “It’s never too late to fight fascism“.
Beyond words, the designer opened with three powerful womenswear looks: a black tweed suit with a cropped jacket; a cocktail dress reimagined in a tartan of silver, red and purple sequins, worn by a model with gothic make-up; and a jacket-and-mini-skirt ensemble in black faux leather, heightened by a play of metal straps and buckles—one of her signatures, applied horizontally or vertically to form skirts or dresses—always nodding to the queer wardrobe.
Soon, dancers—wearing tartan catsuits paired with thigh-high boots, faux-leather mini-shorts, colourful tulle tops or black sequin hoodies—launched into breathless choreography. Then came two women in generously cut suits, one black, the other white. The two models drew closer, stared each other down, touched and kissed intensely and at length, melding like yin and yang as, all around them, the troupe ratcheted up the intensity of their stagecraft. The tableau prompted a wave of approval throughout the Parisian theatre.
Ever more exacting in her use of deadstock materials, the French designer introduced several other visually striking pieces, including a long black faux-leather coat worn over a bodysuit and teamed with metallic thigh-high boots, a houndstooth suit with a broad-shouldered jacket and micro-shorts, and an opulent dress featuring a tartan motif that unfurled from the waist into a train of colourful feathers—a true tribute to the queer community.
That community made its support unmistakable when Friot took to the stage to bow, prompting a prolonged standing ovation for a show that opened Paris Fashion Week Men’s with a bang.
Études Studio and its elegant seekers of sound
On Tuesday, for its show in the impressive Institut de Recherche et Coordination Acoustique, Études Studio staged a composition exploring the tonalities of tailoring. For this collection, christened “N°28 Résonances”, co-founders Aurélien Arbet and Jérémie Egry explained in their letter of intent that they drew inspiration from the origins of 1990s dance music and from the universe of American philosopher John Cage, who questioned the very concepts of music and silence.
To pace their mixed show in soundproofed underground spaces, the French opted for powerful music, teaming with British artist Actress, who composed the soundtrack for a show charting new horizons for Études Studio.
Of course, the brand retained its velvet jackets, hefty canvas blousons with carefully worked washes and a few hoodies (with its logo in a circle of stars on the back), faithful to its utilitarian roots. But the label introduced a compelling, reimagined tailoring proposition, with no fewer than a dozen far more formal looks—straight-cut jackets, fluid trousers and layered shirts, waistcoats and roll-neck jumpers—in black, grey or earthy tones.
Gold prospectors or sound seekers? Between Walkman headphones and cowboy hats, Études Studio refused to choose. Its earnest youths saw their wardrobe explore different material aspects—from worn-in finishes to contrasts between nylon and velvet—and a few chromatic accents, such as an intense purple puffer, or camo riffs on substantial, fuzzy knitwear in shades of green or blue, paired with long, wide scarves in matching hues. This season, the brand presented pieces in collaboration with Berlin-based Canadian artist, Jeremy Shaw.
These silhouettes were accompanied, for the first time, by leather or canvas bags bearing the brand’s logo. This leather goods range, developed in two sizes, should provide a growth driver for the independent creative label.
Valette Studio pays tribute to the New Romantics
Once again this season, Valette Studio’s fashion looked to the past. As the first day of Paris Fashion Week drew to a close, the French brand took over the Institut du Monde Arabe. In a basement room supported by large, thick stone columns, Pierre-François Valette unveiled his Autumn/Winter collection entitled “Les Nouveaux Romantiques”, born of a contemporary melancholy caused by the displacement of creation by image.
This season, Valette Studio focuses on color, frills and ruffles – Samuel Gut
Accompanied by a rock soundtrack with wild percussion, later joined by a violin, the models wore a herringbone denim trench with matching skinny jeans, a short cream dress with a shirt collar and frills that cinched the waist and framed the chest, a black leather ensemble and Louboutins, in collaboration with Louboutin on this collection.
Another dress appeared heavy yet almost bounced, covered in frills and cut from a material that looks, to the eye, like balloon rubber. Perhaps the most striking pieces were two white skirts bearing a made-up face, a watercolour rendered alternately in blue and in orange, created by Teintures de France and inspired in particular by the legendary make-up of David Bowie, the pre-eminent figure of the New Romantics. The models were sometimes adorned with silver make-up swept along the outer corners of the eyes, another nod to the stars of this early-1980s movement. At the end of the show, Pierre-François Valette was warmly applauded by the many guests as he crossed the long room to take his bows.
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Catimini: a name that resonates across France’s childrenswear market. And it is poised for a revival. On January 20, French baby and childrenswear specialist CWF announced the acquisition of Catimini.
CWF takes over Catimini to position it in the premium segment – Catimini
After several turbulent seasons under the ID Kids umbrella, marked by a drastic reduction in its store network from 2023 and a suspension of operations in 2024, Catimini is changing hands. The northern French group had taken over Catimini, along with several other brands from the beleaguered Kidiliz group, in 2020 but failed to restore the brand’s profitability; despite 18 million euros in revenue (per filed accounts) in 2021 and 2022, it posted multi-million-euro losses.
In formalising the deal, without disclosing the amount, Children Worldwide Fashion said it had brought the brand’s founders, Paul and Monique Salmon, who launched the label in 1972, on board.
“Catimini was born of a free and creative vision of children’s fashion. Seeing it join CWF, in Vendée, where it took root, is an obvious choice. We share the same values of know-how, high standards and respect for the brand’s DNA, and I have no doubt about the teams’ ability to embody its codes, gestures and soul,” said Paul Salmon, who is supporting this handover, in a press release.
For CWF, the stakes are high: to restore the lustre of a house that has defined the creative wardrobe of generations of children, while integrating it into the logistical and commercial set-up that has enabled it to establish itself as a strong player on the global children’s luxury stage.
The Les Herbiers-based group built its reputation managing luxury licences (from Givenchy to Marc Jacobs and, more recently, Boss), and is now accelerating the development of its own brands. Alongside Billieblush, Catimini becomes its new in-house standard-bearer. Repositioned in the premium segment, the brand will draw on the group’s expertise as it seeks to reclaim its place in the market by reconnecting with the strongest elements of its DNA, with joyful, graphic fashion in which its signature red is set to play an important role.
CWF is also announcing a first collection for spring/summer 2027, comprising 150 styles for ages 2-14, including accessories, footwear and a gift offering for babies. This comprehensive proposition should quickly find its place within the Kids around network, the group’s multibrand concept, which already boasts 85 stores in 29 countries. The French market accounts for more than a third of the group’s revenue, with CWF Fashion reporting 210 million euros in 2024, according to filed accounts.
To mark this new chapter, CWF intends to make a statement. The group will unveil the first looks of this “new” Catimini on March 11, at a special catwalk show at the Palais de Tokyo in Paris. A deliberate choice of venue, as the site hosts numerous fashion shows during fashion weeks. A symbol of CWF’s determination to bring its premium expertise to Catimini across the board.
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Nike Inc.’s top executive in Greater China, Angela Dong, is stepping down as the sportswear company looks to reverse a sales decline in the market.
Angela Dong – Nike
Dong will leave Nike on March 31, the company said in a statement. She’ll be replaced by Cathy Sparks who was previously leading the Asia Pacific and Latin America division. Nike also announced changes for the leadership of the Europe Middle East and Africa division.
The leadership changes suggest Nike is looking at a new strategy for Greater China. Chief Executive Officer Elliott Hill has recaptured some of Nike’s momentum since taking over, but China remains a key challenge, with sales plunging 17% in the latest quarter.
He said in December that China is “at the top” of the company’s list of priorities, and stressed the company needs to move faster.
Nike shares fell less than 1% in extended trading in New York. The stock fell 16% last year, the fourth consecutive annual decline.