The Best-Dressed Men of Haute Couture Week Fall/Winter 2026
If Haute Couture Week crowned a best-dressed list, these men would take every seat
By Dayne Aduna
- Mingyu, Bad Bunny, Pedro Pascal, Josh O’Connor, and more turned Paris Haute Couture Week into a masterclass in modern menswear, proving the front row can be just as compelling as the runway.
- From razor-sharp Dior tailoring and Schiaparelli’s surreal suiting to Balenciaga’s oversized silhouettes, this season’s standout looks portrayed the distinct identities of each fashion house.
Mingyu and Josh O’Connor at Dior
Mingyu arrived at Dior’s Haute Couture show looking every bit the global ambassador the house has positioned him to be. While many front row guests leaned into statement dressing throughout the week, the SEVENTEEN star demonstrated why classic tailoring continues to carry so much weight.
His impeccably cut navy suit was understated on paper, but under the cameras outside the venue, it became one of the week’s sharpest celebrity looks.
Josh O’Connor approached Dior from the opposite direction. The actor has become one of menswear’s most interesting dressers, and his oversized plaid blazer, open-collar white shirt, and black tie scarf carried a studied nonchalance that has become his signature. Bringing his parents to the presentation only added to the appeal.
Bad Bunny at Schiaparelli
Few celebrities embraced couture’s theatrical spirit as completely as Bad Bunny. Making his first appearance at Paris Haute Couture Week, the Puerto Rican superstar arrived at Schiaparelli in a custom butter-yellow silk suit that blurred the line between impeccable tailoring and wearable art.
The exaggerated double-breasted jacket and pleated wide-leg trousers mirrored Schiaparelli’s sculptural approach, while the house’s signature braided gold tie replaced a conventional necktie altogether. Gold lapel pins shaped like rabbits, miniature chairs, and a one-eyed cartoon heart referenced his stage name and past album imagery.
Hudson Williams and GIVEON at Balenciaga
Pierpaolo Piccioli’s first Haute Couture collection for Balenciaga was among the week’s most anticipated debuts, attracting a packed celebrity front row despite Paris’ relentless summer heat.
Canadian actor Hudson Williams leaned fully into Balenciaga’s oversized language with a chocolate brown suit featuring dropped shoulders and dramatically pooling trousers. R&B singer GIVEON adopted a similar approach with his architectural silhouette.
Pedro Pascal and William Chan at Chanel
At Chanel, elegance arrived with considerably less formality. Pedro Pascal embraced the ease of summer dressing in a crisp white shirt tucked into tailored trousers, finishing the look with a striped knit draped casually over his shoulders and his Chanel Boy.Friend watch.
Actor and Chanel ambassador William Chan offered another interpretation of the house’s timeless codes. His tailoring balanced contemporary proportions with classic French sophistication, allowing him to stand comfortably among an already star-studded front row that included Pedro and Tilda Swinton.
Liu Xuancheng at Rahul Mishra
Rahul Mishra’s Fall/Winter 2026 collection, Devi: The Eternal Muse, celebrated craftsmanship inspired by ancient Indian stone sculptures, making it fitting that Chinese actor Liu Xuancheng arrived wearing a suit covered in intricate naturalistic embroidery.
Maduka Okoye at Jean Paul Gaultier
Among Haute Couture Week’s breakout fashion personalities was Nigerian goalkeeper Maduka Okoye, who made his debut at Jean Paul Gaultier wearing a tailored sage-green sleeveless vest paired with matching trousers and a clean white tank.
His appearance quickly became one of the week’s most talked-about moments after he escorted Cardi B into the show, a gesture that spread rapidly across social media. Combined with his confident tailoring, the moment introduced Maduka as one of fashion week’s most unexpected breakout stars.
Frequently Asked Questions
Some of the standout names included Mingyu, Bad Bunny, Pedro Pascal, Josh O’Connor, William Chan, GIVEON, Hudson Williams, Liu Xuancheng, Hugo Marchand, and Maduka Okoye.
Oversized tailoring, relaxed suiting, monochromatic dressing, intricate embroidery, and classic tailoring were among the defining menswear trends. Rather than following one dominant aesthetic, celebrities embraced styles that embodied the identity of each fashion house.
Bad Bunny wore a custom butter-yellow silk suit featuring a double-breasted blazer with exaggerated shoulders and pleated wide-leg trousers. He completed the look with Schiaparelli’s signature braided gold tie, custom lapel pins, cowboy boots, oversized sunglasses, and gold jewelry.
The SEVENTEEN star and Dior global ambassador wore a tailored navy blue suit to the Dior Fall/Winter 2026-2027 Haute Couture presentation.
Celebrity front row fashion has become an extension of each house’s creative vision, often generating as much attention as the runway itself. The best looks complement the collection while showcasing the wearer’s personal style.

Dayne Aduna
Dayne Aduna is an Associate Editor at VMAN Southeast Asia, specializing in fashion, grooming, film, television, and contemporary pop culture. With a strong editorial focus on menswear, his work explores how style intersects with shifting cultural movements across Southeast Asia and beyond.
His expertise spans fashion journalism, celebrity profiling, grooming and skincare trends, fragrance, runway reporting, and cultural commentary, with a particular eye for emerging creatives and youth-driven style.
Dayne has written extensively on fashion houses, seasonal trends, designer collections, and the evolving image of the modern Southeast Asian man, bringing both editorial depth and cultural relevance to his coverage.
