The Paris Fashion Week Men’s Calendar for Spring 2027 Is Here
Celine’s Michael Rider and Givenchy’s Sarah Burton will be making their men’s runway debuts, and Meryll Rogge will show her first men’s collection under her namesake label.

Reported by Vogue.
Paris Fashion Week Men's Spring/Summer 2027 is shaping up to be the most loaded edition in recent memory — and it's landing right in the middle of the FIFA World Cup. Running June 23 to 28, the calendar counts 74 brands across 36 shows and 38 presentations, according to Vogue. For context, last season's men's Fall/Winter 2026 schedule had 67 brands. The math is simple: more designers, more debuts, more reasons to pay attention.
The headline-grabbers are the women making their menswear marks. Sarah Burton steps onto the men's runway for the first time with Givenchy — and she's been quietly field-testing her instincts by dressing Timothée Chalamet in double-breasted tailoring throughout his Marty Supreme awards campaign. Michael Rider makes his men's debut at Celine, which itself is returning to the runway format after a more intimate, peg-hung presentation at its Rue Vivienne headquarters last season. Meanwhile, Meryll Rogge — appointed Marni's creative director last year — will show her first menswear collection for her own label, founded in 2020.
New Names, Returning Forces
The calendar is also bringing in fresh energy. Soshiotsuki, the Japanese designer who took home the 2025 LVMH Prize, joins Paris after a Pitti Uomo debut in January. Australian label Song for the Mute, co-founded by Melvin Tanaya and Lyna Ty in 2010, makes its Paris entrance alongside newcomer Lad/, founded by Ladislas Mande. On the returning side, Guram Gvasalia brings Vetements back to the Paris men's schedule for the first time since 2022. Saint Laurent opens the week; Pharrell's Louis Vuitton follows. Lemaire, Dior Men, Ami Paris, Kenzo, Rick Owens, Dries Van Noten, and Yohji Yamamoto round out the reliable heavyweights. Friday's lineup includes Willy Chavarria, Isabel Marant, Junya Watanabe, and Lanvin's Peter Copping, who will show his first standalone men's collection for the house after a co-ed debut last January.
The most consequential story unfolding quietly in the background is at Hermès. After Véronique Nichanian held the creative director role for menswear for 37 years, British designer Grace Wales Bonner was named her successor last October. This season, the house will show a transitional collection from its in-house studio team — Wales Bonner's debut comes in January 2027, and the anticipation is already deafening.
The week closes with Wooyoungmi, Sacai, KidSuper, and Celine — and if this calendar is any indicator, the conversation around men's fashion is officially too interesting to ignore.
Read the original at Vogue.


