At London Fashion Week Autumn/Winter 2026, Harris Reed delivered a collection that felt like both a continuation and a quiet turning point. His Ready-to-Wear AW26 show—staged in the dim, gilded intimacy of Claridge’s ballroom—unfolded as a meditation on maximalism, identity, and the evolving language of occasion dressing.
Reed has long built his reputation on theatrical excess, but here, that excess was sharpened into something more deliberate. The collection, titled Multifarious, leaned into his signature codes—sculptural corsetry, exaggerated silhouettes, and operatic flourishes—while introducing a newfound sense of control. A brocade cape thrown over a baroque mini dress, punctuated with an oversized satin bow, set the tone: grandeur, but with intention.
What emerged across the 19 looks was a designer interrogating his own idea of maximalism. Rather than “too much,” Reed framed it as character-building—a way to construct personas through dress. Corsets jutted outward or hovered above the body, panniered hips reshaped tailoring, and fabrics—burnt cobalt velvet, gold quilting, pink jacquard—were layered with tactile richness.
Yet there was a noticeable shift: these pieces, while still fantastical, hinted at wearability. Tailoring softened, silhouettes opened at the back, and even the most sculptural garments carried a sense of movement and release
Central to the collection was Reed’s debut of a gender-fluid bridal offering—perhaps the most natural extension of his world. Four closing looks, veiled in cerulean, magenta, and seafoam, reimagined the ritual of marriage through his inclusive lens. Lace shirts paired with flared trousers, mermaid gowns reworked in duchess satin, and references to both his clients and his own wedding blurred the line between personal narrative and public spectacle. These were not traditional brides, but archetypes—figures of fantasy unbound by gender, each inhabiting Reed’s vision of romance.
These were not traditional brides, but archetypes—figures of fantasy unbound by gender, each inhabiting Reed’s vision of romance.
There was also a broader industry context underpinning the show. Fresh from his tenure at Nina Ricci, Reed appears increasingly focused on defining his own brand universe—one that extends beyond clothing into lifestyle and interiors.
This AW26 outing suggested a designer consolidating his identity: still flamboyant, still unapologetically expressive, but more attuned to longevity and growth.
Ultimately, Harris Reed’s Ready-to-Wear AW26 collection did not abandon spectacle—it refined it. It asked what happens when fantasy meets function, when maximalism learns restraint, and when fashion becomes not just performance, but proposition.
Photography courtesy of Harris Reed.



















