Heirlome Fall 2026

 

Stephanie Suberville has never been afraid of bad weather. For Heirlome’s Fall 2026 collection, the designer leaned into the practical realities of dressing for cold, wet months and turned them into something quietly luxurious. “There’s a lot more opportunity to play with fabrics in fall,” she said at the presentation in New York. “Because the weather’s been so bad, I’ve really been thinking about functionality.”

That pragmatism was beautifully realised through coats and outerwear that looked built to withstand the elements without sacrificing elegance. A cotton-and-wool parka treated for water resistance, a black camel-hair trench, and a sculptural leather jacket each carried the brand’s signature balance of durability and refinement. Suberville designs clothes meant to live in the real world, but always with a sense of ceremony.

Heirlome’s strength lies in its dialogue between craftsmanship and contemporary design. This season, the brand collaborated with Mexican artisan Angélica Morelos, a fifth-generation ceramicist from Michoacán and descendent of the Purépecha people. Her clay dinnerware patterns were reinterpreted as prints across the collection, most strikingly in a motif of hundreds of abstracted faces, each unique, each with its own story. The result was both poetic and powerful, an echo of the individuality that runs through Heirlome’s identity.

Morelos’s influence continued into the knitwear, where silk and cashmere pieces were hand-knitted by artisans in Bolivia. It is this kind of collaboration, grounded in cultural continuity rather than tokenism that gives Heirlome its quiet authority. Suberville’s fall collection reminded us that fashion can still feel human, even when designed for the rain.

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Christian Cowan Fall 2026

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Sergio Hudson Fall 2026