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ブルネッロクチネリAW26 | アルス・イミタトゥル・ナトゥラム

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Brunello Cucinelli’s Autumn/Winter 2026 collection is the textured wake-up call we needed. Titled ‘Ars Imitatur Naturam’ (Art Imitates Nature), it takes Aristotle’s idea as a loose starting point and uses it to rethink how menswear might move, wear and age. The rigid luxury costumes are replaced with a much more fluid and contemporary wardrobe designed for the modern explorer.

This season’s most talked-about move is the styling, particularly the slightly eccentric combination of silk ties and garment-dyed cargo trousers. The tie – often sidelined in contemporary menswear – reappears here as a point of balance, adding composure to trousers cut with utility pockets and softened finishes.

Cucinelli has softened the edges of traditional tailoring, giving blazers a natural, unforced shoulder and a relaxed torso that skims the frame rather than constricting it. Outerwear is equally purposeful. There’s a distinct naval energy to the double-breasted coats, finished with burnished metal buttons that feel like heirlooms.

The real alchemy, however, is in the fabrics. Cucinelli has taken the heavy, historic weight of Donegal and English-inspired tweeds and somehow made them feel as light as air. These living textures are deceptively complex; what looks like a simple neutral from a few feet away reveals an intricate, three-dimensional weave up close. 

The collection is anchored by a deep, resonant palette of forest-floor neutrals and charcoal hues, enriched by the warmth of shearling and suede. As expected, the knitwear is where the collection finds its pulse. This season, the rustic look is back, but it’s been elevated through incredibly fine yarns. We’re seeing cardigans with irregular, hand-hewn textures that feel substantial but remain surprisingly breathable. 

The collection hits boutiques later this year. Discover more here.

photography. courtesy of Brunello Cucinelli
words. Gennaro Costanzo

The post brunello cucinelli aw26 | ars imitatur naturam appeared first on Schön! Magazine.

in HTML format, including tags, to make it appealing and easy to read for Japanese-speaking readers aged 20 to 40 interested in fashion. Organize the content with appropriate headings and subheadings (h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6), translating all text, including headings, into Japanese. Retain any existing tags from

Brunello Cucinelli’s Autumn/Winter 2026 collection is the textured wake-up call we needed. Titled ‘Ars Imitatur Naturam’ (Art Imitates Nature), it takes Aristotle’s idea as a loose starting point and uses it to rethink how menswear might move, wear and age. The rigid luxury costumes are replaced with a much more fluid and contemporary wardrobe designed for the modern explorer.

This season’s most talked-about move is the styling, particularly the slightly eccentric combination of silk ties and garment-dyed cargo trousers. The tie – often sidelined in contemporary menswear – reappears here as a point of balance, adding composure to trousers cut with utility pockets and softened finishes.

Cucinelli has softened the edges of traditional tailoring, giving blazers a natural, unforced shoulder and a relaxed torso that skims the frame rather than constricting it. Outerwear is equally purposeful. There’s a distinct naval energy to the double-breasted coats, finished with burnished metal buttons that feel like heirlooms.

The real alchemy, however, is in the fabrics. Cucinelli has taken the heavy, historic weight of Donegal and English-inspired tweeds and somehow made them feel as light as air. These living textures are deceptively complex; what looks like a simple neutral from a few feet away reveals an intricate, three-dimensional weave up close. 

The collection is anchored by a deep, resonant palette of forest-floor neutrals and charcoal hues, enriched by the warmth of shearling and suede. As expected, the knitwear is where the collection finds its pulse. This season, the rustic look is back, but it’s been elevated through incredibly fine yarns. We’re seeing cardigans with irregular, hand-hewn textures that feel substantial but remain surprisingly breathable. 

The collection hits boutiques later this year. Discover more here.

photography. courtesy of Brunello Cucinelli
words. Gennaro Costanzo

The post brunello cucinelli aw26 | ars imitatur naturam appeared first on Schön! Magazine.

and integrate them seamlessly into the new content without adding new tags. Ensure the new content is fashion-related, written entirely in Japanese, and approximately 1500 words. Conclude with a “結論” section and a well-formatted “よくある質問” section. Avoid including an introduction or a note explaining the process.

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