Tory Burch Resort 2027
Tory Burch Resort 2027 collection, runway looks, beauty, models, and reviews.

Reported by Vogue.
Anderson .Paak showed up to the Met Gala in white patent Reva flats — Tory Burch's iconic shoe, on one of the night's most eccentric fits. Burch had no hand in the rest of the look, but she likely would have claimed the energy. That same instinct for the unexpectedly right thing runs straight through her Resort 2027 collection, which she describes as an extension of her recent runway work, now spiked with what she calls "a bit more peculiar spontaneity."
Color hits first and hardest: lemon yellow drop-waist dresses, an acid green cardigan paired against a burgundy leather skirt. But the real story is in the texture. That cardigan set is brushed and deliberately pilled — imperfection as intention. The leather skirt is burnished to something almost crackly, like it lived a whole life before you found it. According to Vogue, Burch is doubling down on quirky irreverence at a moment when plenty of her peers are retreating into cool minimalism. She's not interested in that particular safe harbor.
Old Craft, New Attitude
The evening pieces are where the collection gets genuinely interesting. Burch pulled hand-embroidered ribbon and gathered rosettes — techniques that sound like they belong in your grandmother's sewing room — and reframed them entirely. The ribbon dress comes with a faux dickey neckline, as if you layered a favorite sleeveless tee underneath a formal silhouette. The rosettes, meanwhile, refuse to stay in their lane: they appear on party dresses and everyday tops and skirts with equal confidence. Nothing is precious about the placement, which is exactly the point.
The whole collection has a vintage-closet quality — the kind of clothes you'd unearth from a box your mother or grandmother forgot she'd kept, and immediately want to wear out that night. But Burch isn't trading practicality for personality. She pointed to two raincoats in glazed wallpaper jacquard — one vivid yellow, one bright orange — that fully reverse to khaki. Wearable in every direction, literally.
Burch has found her lane: maximalist and considered, strange and completely wearable — and she's not moving out of it for anyone.
Read the original at Vogue.


