
Summary
- Nigo’s SS26 series “Club Kenzo”, Insimation from Andy Warhol factory, Kenzo Takada’s 1970s studio and Nigo’s own diverse community
- The collection is a playful, questionable subculture, infused with Italian tailoring and presented at Maxim’s
- The series celebrates carefree summer love, fuzzy styled gender lines and whimsical graphics
Kenzounder creative guidance Good luckuncover its Spring and Summer 2026 The series, called “Kenzo Club”. This season turns the runway into a vibrant space where past, present and future cultures are all integrated. From three iconic cultural epicenters (the factory of Andy Warhol, Kenzo Takada’s 1970s Paris studio, and Nigo’s own vast streetwear, celebrity and creative contemporaries), it’s a playful, doubtful, questionable subculture and sophisticated design. Holding in Maxim, a venue full of culturally integrated history Fujivara Further pay tribute to the abyss of the nigger.
Titled “Kenzo Club,” the series celebrates the carefree spirit of summer love, where the act of wearing the night becomes a bold statement. Kenzo Guy and Kenzo Girl know each other, blurring the line between “his, hers, and theirs” and embodying a style of taking going out seriously, but not serious. This fun attitude is reflected in the graphics inspired by the bowling alley and the whimsical love story between the tiger and rabbit, resulting in the fascinating metaphor of the “rabbit and tiger stripes”, a metaphorical metaphor that is an unexpected result of a blending of different worlds. The bowling pattern is performed on platform shoes, which are made with a solid wood base or a base that looks like a variety of plastic sleeves, reminiscent of a snowball with a mini figurine through a transparent liquid.
Punk subversion highlighted in the introduction of the house’s Italian tailoring, which included a pink dinner jacket and turned into a bold day with a new custom monogram lining, while Nigo’s reinterpretation of Japanese tailoring turned into a new evening dress statement, rendering of exquisite satin. Armed military and work clothes are available in punk-style colors with luxurious details such as mother-of-pearl buttons and bright faux fur. A rose-colored chef’s shirt, asymmetrical buttons pay tribute to founder Kenzo Takada, rooting favorites with iconic archival silhouettes. Patterns and patterns are a vibrant collage: Archive floral scent, including the revival of Kenzo Tokada’s own rose prints, blended with designs from the early 1990s, and they gain psychedelic characters when mixed with shapes such as stars, boards and harlequin prints. This new graphic universe creates a unique, sustained language for the house.
Bold accessories, such as the Bedsazzled buckle, with Kenzo branding, along with other tongue and cheek phrases like “Meow” and “Woof,” exacerbates the wild and bold statements of the series, and nothing is as serious as it seems. The bags are paired with the living leather and hardy canvas to get a “attitude” and are further customized with patches and spray paint, reflecting the punk aesthetics and Nego’s appreciation of worn collectibles. Animal patterns throughout the collection add cowhide matching jackets and pants and pair them with tiger hoodies and coats.