Safi – Paris Men’s Fashion Week will kick off on June 23 with Louis Vuitton and closes on June 28 with Celine, while featuring new designers leading at Dior, Givenchy, and Hermès in between.
The official calendar features 74 houses over six days, divided between 36 runway shows and 38 presentations, the showroom viewings that sit just below the catwalk in formality.
The first day will run from afternoon into night. Saint Laurent will open at 5 p.m. under Anthony Vaccarello, who has shaped the house for a decade, and Louis Vuitton will close the evening at 9 p.m. with menswear designed by Pharrell Williams, who has been in charge of the line since 2023.
The following day is dedicated to Dior, where Jonathan Anderson becomes the first designer since Christian Dior to oversee the house’s womenswear, menswear, and couture simultaneously.
Christian Louboutin, a label known for its red-soled shoes, will share the date with a men’s collection designed by the actor and musician Jaden Smith.
Thursday will center on Sarah Burton’s debut, as she unveils her first menswear collection for Givenchy, the house’s womenswear line she took over after more than two decades at Alexander McQueen.
The same evening, the leather house Berluti will gather guests for a presentation it calls “Impressions et Sensations.”
Friday will be running late, with Vetements showing at 8:30 p.m. under Guram Gvasalia.
The weekend will feature Hermès, which holds a presentation on Saturday.
Its menswear has passed to Grace Wales Bonner, who succeeds Véronique Nichanian after a 37-year tenure, the longest of any designer at a major house.
The week will end on Sunday with Celine, where Michael Rider shows his first men’s-only collection at noon, two seasons after he began presenting men’s and women’s together.
The schedule keeps room for newcomers too, through “Sphere,” a showroom at the Palais de Tokyo that runs from June 24-28 and gives emerging labels like Cachí, Ouest Paris, and the Finnish brand Rolf Ekroth an official place on the calendar.