For Fall 2026, the brand transformed a classic Milanese location into a reflection of Creative Director Sandra Choi’s studio, offering a collection rooted in boldness, confidence and instinctive creativity. As the house marks its 30th anniversary, the mood feels intentional: youth meets experience, freedom meets refinement.


“I started with a very precise intention; I was drawn to the idea of dressing the leg, extending our canvas,” Choi shared. That idea sets the tone immediately. This season, the leg is the focus and boots are the headline.
Low-heeled, knee-high, Western and Biker silhouettes dominate the lineup, oscillating between utilitarian and unapologetically glamorous. The Biker boot stands out as a defining piece: tough leather construction, buckle detailing at the ankle, rendered in shades of brown, black and velvet suede. It’s grounded, assertive and slightly rebellious, a reminder that practicality can still carry attitude.
But the collection doesn’t stop at statement boots.
Fan-favorite styles return with updated polish. The Scarlett is reimagined in lace and supple nappa leather. The Caly Boot and low-heeled Eyla sling-back extend the brand’s balance of wearability and elegance, while evening silhouettes like the Coko heel and Issy Pump lean into classic glamour with sharper lines.








The bags echo that same interplay between heritage and evolution. The Cinch bag makes a comeback in a spotted snake print first seen in the brand’s archive capsule with Conner Ives, blending nostalgia with renewed texture. Elsewhere, the Bar holdall, the Margot, and the Eska Loafer reinforce the collection’s structured sophistication. A fringed iteration of the Bar Hobo bag adds movement, subtle, but impactful.
What makes Fall 2026 resonate is its clarity. There’s no over-explaining, no excessive ornamentation. Instead, the collection asserts that glamour can be direct. That dressing the leg can be transformative. That boots often seen as purely functional, can anchor an entire narrative.