Hed Mayner set an early tone at Pitti Uomo 109, unveiling one of the fair’s first presentations with a collection that balanced monumental proportion with a subtle sense of disruption. The Paris-based designer leaned into his signature oversized silhouettes while introducing flashes of unconventional glamour, ensuring the show never settled into predictability.
The season’s guiding question—“Who has the freedom to look different, who tugs at the norm?”—was reflected in Mayner’s deliberate repositioning of familiar codes. Classical elements were stripped from their expected contexts, allowing formal and informal worlds to collide. Faded denim jeans and relaxed cardigans shared the runway with crushed velvet gowns, metallic track pants, and sequined trousers, blurring the boundaries between occasionwear and everyday dressing.
Tailoring remained a cornerstone of the collection, but it arrived softened and reshaped. Jackets featured assertive, forward-thrust shoulders and sleeves that curved away from the elbow, creating a sculptural line without rigidity. Elsewhere, dramatic drapery took center stage: houndstooth and chevron capes moved with a pronounced sway, while pleated Ultrasuede smocks and oversized faux fur coats amplified the sense of volume and movement.
Accessories further extended the collection’s offbeat elegance. Collapsed brown leather handbags were paired with modular mixed-media bags built from contrasting compartments. Chains adorned with leather straps—resembling repurposed bag handles—were worn as jewelry, while silk scarves tied around the head added a refined, almost ceremonial finish. On the footwear front, Mayner introduced a reworked Reebok archive silhouette, the NPC Insigna, heat-washed to create a distorted, elongated profile that echoed the collection’s warped proportions.
Altogether, Hed Mayner’s FW26 presentation at Pitti Uomo 109 was a study in controlled imbalance—where tradition was unsettled just enough to open new possibilities.





