Fashion

Tanya Taylor Resort 2027

Tanya Taylor Resort 2027 collection, runway looks, beauty, models, and reviews.

By Elliot O·Jun 7, 2026·1 min read
Tanya Taylor Resort 2027

Reported by Vogue.

There is a very specific woman Tanya Taylor designed her Resort 2027 collection for, and she has an excellent address. Think Park Avenue, November, nothing on the calendar but drifting between friends' apartments with a martini in hand — polished enough to mean it, relaxed enough not to care too hard. It is a narrow brief, and Taylor nailed it.

The range reads like a well-edited wardrobe drop rather than a runway spectacle. According to Vogue, Taylor built the collection around the idea of clothes that "glide with you" — her words — meaning nothing too constructed, nothing that fights your body. A doe-print ponyhair jacket worn with twisted-seam denim. A pink double-face half-zip matched to a bouclé maxi. These are pieces that occupy the sweet spot between dressed and undressed, which is honestly where most of us live anyway.

When "Cozy" Has a Dress Code

For moments that call for something more elevated — a martini-over, let's say, rather than a sleepover — Taylor offers a matelassé jacquard coat with a pleated back, bracelet-length sleeves, and cacao marabou trim. It is objectively luxurious without being stiff. On the more casual end: an olive green sequin-embroidered shirt and boxer-cut shorts, which manage to feel effortless and considered at once. The breadth of that range is the point.

Fabric choices did the heavy lifting on versatility. Cool, slippery satins handled drape-front blouses and bias-cut slip pieces. Spongy knits covered the cozy side of the spectrum. Suedes and leathers brought structure where it was needed without tipping into severity. Taylor was clearly thinking about temperature — real temperature, the kind you actually encounter moving between a heated lobby and a drafty pre-war apartment in late fall.

Resort collections often feel like filler between the main events, but Taylor treated this one like an actual wardrobe problem worth solving — and the answer turned out to be more interesting than "expensive loungewear."


Read the original at Vogue.

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