Louis Vuitton’s Fall/Winter 2026 menswear campaign, designed by Pharrell Williams, is shot at ground control stations and rocket launchpads, reframing the House’s travel heritage through the lens of space exploration
The collection introduces LV Silk Tech, a twill-woven hybrid of 51% silk and 49% recycled nylon that is water-repellent, crease-resistant, and anti-fraying, with a sheen the House says is visually indistinguishable from leather
A new LV Drop 300 sneaker, named for its sub-300-gram weight, pairs water-resistant nylon and suede calf leather with python and LV Silk Tech across a thermoformed, cushioned sole
Louis Vuitton‘s Fall/Winter 2026 menswear campaign, designed by Creative Director Pharrell Williams, has arrived with a material innovation at its core. Shot across ground control stations and rocket launchpads, the campaign situates ready-to-wear, tailoring, and accessories in the anticipatory atmosphere of a space-bound launch, drawing inspiration from astronauts, scientists, and the technicians who turn rovers and lunar landings into reality. The imagery accompanies the broader in-store rollout of the collection’s most significant development: LV Silk Tech, a proprietary fabric that began arriving at select Louis Vuitton locations worldwide on July 9.
LV Silk Tech is a twill-woven hybrid composed of 51% silk and 49% recycled nylon. Its functional properties read like an engineering brief: water-repellent, anti-fraying, crease-resistant, and lightweight, with a unique sheen and silken hand feel that the House says is easily mistaken for supple leather. The fabric was first shown on the Fall/Winter 2026 menswear runway in Paris on January 20, where Williams’ collection envisioned a wardrobe built at the intersection of cutting-edge industrial advancement and enduring wearability.
The material draws its conceptual lineage from early 20th-century silk parachutes and hot air balloons, reinterpreting their resilience-to-weight ratio and tensile strength for a contemporary wardrobe. By weaving silk with reclaimed nylon, Louis Vuitton achieves a structure that is simultaneously refined and load-bearing: a Silk Tech City bag, for example, can support up to 50 kilograms. Debuting in the classic brown-and-gold Louis Vuitton Monogram pattern, the fabric recalls the House’s signature coated canvas paired with vegetable-tanned cowhide leather, positioning what is functionally a technical textile within a distinctly heritage-coded visual language.
Silk Tech extends across a wide product range, spanning soft-touch garments including hooded windbreakers, down puffers, and athleisure silhouettes, alongside a permanent line of bags and travel goods. Named items include the Christopher East-West and Nano, Track Backpack, Nil XL and 45, Alma Shoulder, Speedy 30 and 40, Keepall 50, Rush Bumbag, Dustbag Tote, Sirius Reversible, Jetlag and Hanging Toiletry Bag, and brimmed caps, as well as three footwear styles: the LV Drop 300, LV Trainer, and LV Tilted Sneaker.
Of those footwear offerings, the LV Drop 300 stands as the collection’s most spec-driven proposition. Named for its weight of just over 300 grams per shoe, the sneaker features a rubber outsole whose tread pattern mimics the concentric ripple effect of a single drop hitting a liquid surface. Layers of water-resistant nylon and suede calf leather form the upper, with select colorways incorporating python and LV Silk Tech nylon. A thermoformed insole provides enduring cushioning, while a streamlined silhouette and flexible structure deliver immediate shock absorption and agility underfoot. Subtle LV branding appears across the upper and tongue, with a Monogram flower detail at the heel balancing ergonomic design with the House’s visual signatures. The palette spans monochromatic neutrals, pop primaries and pastels, signature Monogram brown and gold, and dyed snakeskin.
Williams has framed the sneaker’s reference points as rooted in an earlier era of fitness culture, from exercise videos to cereal box sports stars, performance iconography reinterpreted through Louis Vuitton’s shoemaking savoir-faire and contemporary manufacturing technologies. The LV Drop 300’s material layering and sub-300-gram build position it as a technical runner that bridges nostalgic activewear codes with the House’s luxury finishing.
The broader campaign imagery reinforces this tension between familiar and frontier. By placing the collection in the utilitarian environments where space missions are prepared rather than executed, Williams reframes Louis Vuitton’s travel legacy as forward-facing aspiration rather than retrospective nostalgia. Launchpads, telescopes, and research labs redefine the concept of travel as pure potential, pointing toward distant galaxies and uncharted territories alongside the disciplined human minds that pursue them. It is, as the House describes it, a picture no longer made merely for the jet set.
Louis Vuitton’s Fall/Winter 2026 Menswear Collection, including the full LV Silk Tech range and the LV Drop 300 sneaker, is available now at select Louis Vuitton stores worldwide.
