At Paris Fashion Week, the Fall / Winter 2026- 2027 show by Tom Ford was not simply the unveiling of a new collection, but a demonstration of how a fashion house can evolve while remaining faithful to its identity. Guiding this delicate balance is Haider Ackermann, who seems to have found an almost natural harmony with the aesthetic universe of the founder Tom Ford.
The impression is immediate. This is neither nostalgia nor quotation. Rather, it is an emotional continuity, a controlled sensuality that runs through every look with elegance and precision.
The white dress becomes the essence of the collection. Stiletto heels are its inevitable accessory. Black shorts define the silhouette with almost graphic confidence.
In the menswear wardrobe, the narrative unfolds around pinstripes. Tailored suits retain a classic structure, yet they are disrupted by subtle contemporary gestures that shift their perception. Cropped shirts appear unexpectedly, interrupting the discipline of tailoring and introducing a new, bolder tension.
Women’s looks move between rigor and surprise. A black and white leopard motif runs through the collection in different intensities, becoming a visual code that accompanies the evolution of the silhouettes. It is not an aggressive animal print, but a refined, almost abstract graphic sign.
Then come the materials, which build the most sensual dimension of the collection. The black leather sheath dress clings to the body with almost cinematic precision, while black jackets are layered with transparent PVC, reflecting light and multiplying surfaces.
It is in this combination of restraint and desire that Ackermann’s signature emerges. The collection is almost poetic. Sensually poetic. Yet it never becomes fragile or sentimental.
It does not surrender to the nostalgia that is currently running through much of fashion. It does not seek refuge in the past. Instead, it passes through it and transforms it.
It remains difficult to explain the true origin of the alchemy between Ackermann and the legacy of Tom Ford. And yet the result is evident. Rarely has a designer been able to lead a house he did not found while still preserving the impulses of the one who created it.
The forms are traditional. The sheath dress. The pinstripe suit. The tailored jacket. But within these structures Ackermann injects a new character, a contemporary attitude that suddenly makes them feel alive.
Perhaps this is the rarest quality of the collection. Not reinventing everything, but making what we see feel inevitable.