

Paris Fashion Week has its rituals: the thrum of photographers outside the venue, the hush before first looks, and — on nights like this — the electricity of a closer who commands the room. For Schiaparelli’s Spring/Summer 2026 show, that closer was Kendall Jenner. And just a few meters away, Kylie Jenner was the narrator: documenting, cheering, then pivoting the story into a sleek sisters’ night out. Together, they turned a single runway slot into a two-part performance — part couture spectacle, part street-style manifesto.
Act I: Kendall, the Closer

To end Daniel Roseberry’s show, Kendall stepped into a striking, sheer black gown sprinkled with horsehair polka dots, paired with long opera gloves — a look that distilled Schiaparelli’s taste for drama and exacting craft. It was a closer designed to be remembered: transparencies calibrated rather than shouty, surrealist flourishes transposed into something modern and razor-clean. The moment confirmed Kendall’s affinity for high-impact finales — and Schiaparelli’s for sculpting them.
Act II: Kylie, the Co-Author

If Kendall delivered the exclamation point, Kylie supplied the context. From the front row, she chose a shimmering, silver gown with bold fringe and a molded metal clutch — an armor-adjacent take on eveningwear that read “star witness” rather than mere spectator. Later on Instagram, she posted a backstage carousel — little-sister shoulder helping big-sister put on her shoes, a glass of wine held high — with a proud caption that began, “My sister closed Schiaparelli!!!!!” and ended on “DREAM NIGHT.” The post underscored what the cameras captured: this wasn’t just attendance; it was active, affectionate participation.
One sister embodied the body-bare runway fantasy; the other, the polished shield of metallic sheen. Exposure and enclosure — a potent contrast that tells a bigger story about how women choose to be seen.
The Quick-Change: From Couture to the City
When the lights dimmed and guests spilled into the Paris night, the sisters changed the script — and their looks. Kendall kept her current vintage streak going in an archival Spring/Summer 1995 John Galliano “pin-up” dress: a gray, tailored peplum top with structured shoulders and buttons set above a black midi skirt. Hair: slicked back; shoes: sharp black stilettos.
Beside her, Kylie translated “French-girl, but make it Jenner” in a black bandeau mini with a bow at the bust, a brown leather Coperni bag, rust-red mules, and a beige trench shrugged off the arm. The styling read like a deliberate diptych: one look architectural and precision-cut; the other playful and ease-driven.
Setting the Week’s Context

This reunion came amid busy, separate Paris schedules. Kylie had been out the day prior at Tom Ford, easing back from her Euro-summer into an autumn palette that includes leather and fresh KHY drops.

Kendall, meanwhile, has been selective with her appearances — walking L’Oréal Paris’s Le Défilé and taking in The Row — before taking Schiaparelli’s final bow. Each choice slots neatly into her personal brand: Kendall’s quiet-power minimalism with a vintage twist; Kylie’s glossy futurism with a business-builder’s eye.
The Fashion Takeaways
- Sheer, but Considered: Kendall’s closer sits squarely within the long-running “naked dress” conversation — but the execution was couture-precise. The horsehair-dot texture and opera gloves elevated the look from provocation to construction study, which is why it landed as a statement rather than a stunt.
- Metal as Message: Kylie’s silver-fringe gown and molded clutch tapped into the season’s continued fascination with chainmail, metallics, and sculptural accessories — the “hard shine” that contrasts beautifully with fluid silhouettes. It’s a trend that photographs brilliantly and reads instantly on social feeds.
- Vintage Remains the Culture Shaper: Kendall’s Galliano ‘95 quick-change shows how the right archival piece can reset a night’s narrative. It suggests longevity, literacy, and the quiet confidence of a wearer who doesn’t need logos to speak loudly.
The Sister Strategy

The reason this moment traveled? It wasn’t only the clothes. It was the choreography: Kendall carrying the runway narrative; Kylie crafting the after-image. The carousel, the caption, the shared exit — these are the modern tools of fashion storytelling. The looks were strong; the staging made them sticky. And the contrast — transparent vs. metallic, archival tailoring vs. bow-topped mini — functioned like a mood board anyone could decode.
Why It Matters for Paris — and for Schiaparelli
Schiaparelli thrives when spectacle meets finesse. A closer that ignites conversation, immediately followed by a sister-scripted street tableau, extends the life of the collection far beyond the runway. For Paris, it’s the latest proof that the most resonant Fashion Week moments now exist across formats: catwalk, backstage, sidewalk, feed. For the Jenner sisters, it’s confirmation of a well-honed dynamic — two distinct style languages, one shared headline.