Fashion

Norma Kamali Resort 2027

Norma Kamali Resort 2027 collection, runway looks, beauty, models, and reviews.

By Elliot O·Jun 6, 2026·2 min read
Norma Kamali Resort 2027

Reported by Vogue.

Norma Kamali doesn't start a collection with a plan. No moodboards, no manifesto — just an office full of dressed mannequins and a design philosophy built on surrender. "You've got to let it take you," she told Vogue, which is how Western details like cow print and fringed faux-suede ended up threading through her Resort 2027 lineup without anyone intending them to. Intention is overrated, apparently, and the clothes prove it.

What did emerge organically was a color story so cohesive it functions as the collection's spine: a rusty brown Kamali named foxtrot, avocado green, and toffee — each shade explored in enough variations that virtually every piece works with every other piece. That's not an accident, it's architecture. A velvet hoodie tunic worn over a mesh skirt reads as a dress until you realize they're separates. The whole collection operates this way — mix-and-match elevated to something that actually feels luxurious rather than lazy.

The Pieces That Pull the Past Forward

Kamali's eye for longevity shows up most clearly in her one-pieces. She revisited a jumpsuit silhouette that Bianca Jagger once made iconic — basque waist, gathered balloon pants — but swapped the halter top for a sleek turtleneck. "It's sexy, but it's actually covered up," she said, and she's right: the restraint makes it sharper. Then there's the Bill (look 63), her original swimsuit named after her brother, which has been in rotation since the Studio 54 era. Back then, women wore it to dance in all night — sweat-proof by design, built-in shorts, functionally brilliant. It still looks like a micromini. It still sells.

That tension between practicality and pleasure is the through-line Kamali has never abandoned. "How can you be practical and smart but make it fun?" she asked — not rhetorically. Every design decision in this collection is an answer to that question: clothes that work harder than they look, silhouettes that flatter without demanding effort, a palette that does the coordination for you so you don't have to think.

Resort 2027 is a reminder that the most sophisticated fashion isn't the most complicated — it's the kind that makes getting dressed feel inevitable rather than labored, and Kamali has spent five decades making that look effortless.


Read the original at Vogue.

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