The Designers and Brands That Defined the Season

The Designers and Brands That Defined the Season

Author: The Business of Fashion March 13, 2026 Duration: 54:24

After a season shaped less by shock debuts and more by second and third chapters, Tim Blanks and Imran Amed take stock of the fashion month that was. 


“This season was kind of one note for me,” says Blanks. “It reminded me that in that golden age … of the ’90s, you would go to a day that was just bang, bang, bang. That’s what I still crave — that sense of surprise and that sense of designers working at a peak.”


If last season was driven by anticipation, this one was more revealing; in addition to witnessing how their creative ideas are evolving, new designers’ visions are now landing in stores, meeting customers and beginning to show whether they can convert attention into traction.



Key Insights: 

  • For both Blanks and Amed, Chanel is the season’s most convincing success story – not just on the runway, but in the store. Amed describes seeing customers respond viscerally to Matthieu Blazy’s first ready-to-wear in person, noting that “the way customers were engaging with that product — the shoes, the bags — I hadn’t seen anything like that since Alessandro Michele at Gucci.” Blanks argues that the collection’s appeal lies in the intelligence of its details — not in obvious Instagram gestures, but in private pleasures built into the clothes. He points to a tweed jacket lined with a scarf print drawn from a caricature of Chanel herself and says, “That lining would be your secret.” For him, this is precisely why the work resonates: “He says we don’t make fashion for Instagram… and I think that kind of thing will elicit an incredible response from people.”



  • Gucci prompts the most debate because the stakes are so high. Amed frames Demna’s task as structurally different from what he previously achieved at Balenciaga. However, Blanks is more interested in the atmosphere and coded intention of the show, even if he remains unsettled by it. “I think that in his mind he was making a show about Italian fashion,” he says, adding that “it came across better in pictures than it actually did while we were watching it.” Still, he stops short of dismissal: “There is so much in fashion that I can look at and say, well, it’s not for me, but I appreciate that it’s for someone.”



  • Just months into the role, both Amed and Blanks see clear signs of Anderson’s authorship beginning to take shape inside the house of Dior. Blanks points to details like the lily pad shoes, which echo the surrealist footwear from Anderson’s past work, noting that “he already has signatures at Dior.” More broadly, Blanks describes the approach as “a magpie sensibility applied to the monolith of a brand.” Amed agrees that the pace of change is striking, saying “the amount that he’s already brought to that brand in such a short period of time is pretty extraordinary,” even if the process remains experimental. “Not everything is successful,” he adds, “but that’s the way he progresses… he’s refining, he’s a refiner.”



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Behind the runway shows and seasonal collections lies a vast, intricate industry where creativity meets commerce. The Business of Fashion Podcast pulls back the curtain on this world, offering candid conversations that go far beyond surface-level trends. Each episode connects you directly with the minds shaping what we wear and why-designers grappling with production challenges, CEOs navigating global markets, and innovators rethinking sustainability and technology. These are not just interviews, but substantive discussions that unpack the real decisions, pressures, and breakthroughs happening at the intersection of art and enterprise. You’ll hear analysis on shifting consumer behaviors, the economics behind brand strategies, and personal stories from leaders who have built iconic labels or are launching disruptive new ventures. It’s the audio companion to the publication’s deeply reported journalism, providing context and clarity on the forces driving fashion forward. For anyone curious about the craft, the culture, and the calculated risks that define modern style, this podcast serves as an essential, engaging guide. Tune in for perspectives that are as insightful as they are accessible, whether you’re building a career in the industry or simply want to understand the business behind the beauty.
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