Lauren Manoogian Resort 2027
Lauren Manoogian Resort 2027 collection, runway looks, beauty, models, and reviews.

Reported by Vogue.
There's a particular kind of designer who builds a world rather than just a wardrobe, and Lauren Manoogian is one of them. Her Resort 2027 collection is less about trend-chasing and more about the pleasure of fabric itself — surfaces that demand to be touched, layered, lived in. According to Vogue, the collection is a deliberate counterpoint to her previous Fall offering. "Fall was very clean and linear," Manoogian explained. "By contrast, this is more about an accumulated texture." Crinkled cottons, crushed weaves, and knits ranging from close-cropped to outright shaggy make the case that texture is its own form of dressing.
The season's most unexpected move: bold shoulders. Not the padded, structural kind borrowed from menswear archives, but something more considered. "This isn't a shoulder pad, it's a knitting technique," Manoogian stressed — meaning the shape is literally set into the construction of the garment itself. The result is strong and soft simultaneously, which is harder to pull off than it sounds. For the texture-curious but commitment-averse, shrugs offer an easy on-ramp to the look without the full architectural statement.
Two Suits, Two Philosophies
Manoogian is known for her knitwear, but her tailoring deserves equal attention. Resort 2027 presents two pantsuits that essentially argue with each other — and both win. The first is built from a papery, semi-transparent crushed cotton voile in misty yellow: a lapelless jacket with a V-neck, generously cut drawstring trousers, the whole thing reading like a exhale. The second suit operates on entirely different terms. Developed with a master tailor in Peru and crafted from baby alpaca merino, it was originally cut to fit a single body before being graded down for a broader range of women. The jacket carries a subtle barrel shape, hits at the hip, and conceals hand stitching behind its gently shaped lapel — the kind of detail you only notice up close, which is exactly the point.
The same brushed alpaca merino reappears in a coat that anchors the collection's thesis: that tactility is not a styling choice at this label, it's the entire language. Every piece asks something of you — to slow down, reach out, feel the difference between a crinkle and a crush, a knit shoulder and a padded one.
When fashion is this invested in how things actually feel against a body, it stops being about looks entirely — and that's precisely what makes it worth wearing.
Read the original at Vogue.


