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January is often reserved for a quiet shift from holiday mode to reality, but fashion, as ever, does not slow down. Just a week into the new year, the industry already has a lot to have on one’s radar.
From Louis Vuitton celebrating 130 years of its iconic Monogram with three deeply considered capsule collections to Lunar New Year campaigns preparing for the Year of the Horse, here are the launches, campaigns, and collaborations setting the tone for the year ahead.
Fashion news for January 2026
Tommy Hilfiger debuts 2026 capsule collection

Tommy Hilfiger begins 2026 with a familiar face and a fresh perspective. Reuniting with global ambassador JISOO, the brand unveils a Lunar New Year capsule that fuses classic American prep with cultural symbolism and contemporary ease.
Anchored by a rope logo drawn from the archives, the capsule reimagines polos, crewnecks and chinos with a sense of optimism and play. Reds and blues dominate, naturally echoing both festive tradition and Hilfiger’s nautical heritage. JISOO wears it with effortless confidence, modelling leather varsity jackets with mini shirt-dresses, quilted jackets layered over striped knits, and loafers ground the look in timeless polish.
The result is a wardrobe that feels celebratory. It’s modern prep, recharged for the new year.
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Pandora and Bridgerton form the ultimate Regency romance

Regencycore is back, with Pandora’s latest collaboration proving that romance is far from dated. Partnering with Bridgerton, the brand introduces a 14-piece jewellery collection that translates the show’s fantasy and emotional drama into playful, wearable pieces. Two of the show’s stars, Hannah Dodd and Claudia Jessie, star in the collection’s campaign, which was shot by Tim Walker and styled by Harry Lamber.
Floral motifs, pearls, bows and pastel hues nod to the symbolism of Georgian-era jewellery, while iconic Bridgerton details—wisteria lilac, the ever-present bee, even a gem-studded teabag charm—add charm and irreverence, with all pieces crafted from recycled sterling silver and 14k gold-plated.
The collection will be available to shop from January 15.
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Tiffany & Co. ushers in the Year of the Horse

Tiffany & Co. enters the Lunar New Year with a Pegasus motif inspired by Jean Schlumberger. Brought to life under the direction of Chief Artistic Officer Nathalie Verdeille, it serves as a symbol of grace, strength and forward motion.
Alongside the Pegasus, Tiffany’s most recognisable collections take on renewed meaning. Knot by Tiffany speaks to unbreakable bonds, while a pink sapphire-set mini key pendant adds a joyful, celebratory note. HardWear, T, and Lock collections continue the narrative, each expressing a different facet of connection, protection and possibility.
Launching globally on January 4, the campaign feels both timely and timeless, rooted in Tiffany’s heritage, but attuned to the emotional resonance of the New Year.
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Louis Vuitton celebrates 130 years of the monogram

Few motifs carry the cultural weight of Louis Vuitton’s Monogram, and for its 130th anniversary, the House is celebrating not with nostalgia alone, but with a renewed vision. Three capsule collections—Monogram Origine, VVN, and Time Trunk—explore the Monogram as a living language, one that continues to evolve alongside the craft and curiosity that built it.
Monogram Origine feels like a love letter to early travel, with a newly developed coated canvas, inspired by archival registers from 1908, introducing softened textures and subtle pastel inflections over classic Ebène. Heritage bags like the Speedy and Alma gain new depth, while VVN places natural leather centre stage. Vegetable-tanned and left to age beautifully, these pieces are designed to become deeply personal over time, growing richer with wear.
Then there is Time Trunk: a trompe-l’œil triumph that transforms archival trunks into hyper-real, printed canvases. Futuristic yet reverent, it distils centuries of savoir-faire into a single visual gesture. Together, the collections remind us that the Monogram isn’t just a pattern, but a story still being written.
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Dior unveils its Spring/Summer 2026 campaign

Dior’s Spring/Summer 2026 campaign, shot by David Sims, unfolds like a series of visual notes— intimate, restrained, and deeply considered. Under Jonathan Anderson’s direction, the House’s codes are reinterpreted through atmosphere rather than spectacle, focusing on how clothing lives on the body and within a moment.
Set in spare, aristocratic interiors, the images feature a cast from a range of disciplines: Greta Lee, Louis Garrel, Kylian Mbappé and others appear caught mid-rehearsal, mid-thought, mid-becoming. Archive references—from the Bar jacket to Delft shorts—are seamlessly woven, culminating in a striking balance of structure and softness.
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