chanel metiers d'art 2026
Tebougie
Tebougie
14 June 2026

chanel metiers d'art 2026

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The most coveted runway of the pre-fall 2026 season didn't take place in a gilded Parisian hall. It unfolded in the dark, echoing tunnels of a decommissioned New York City subway station — and it was nothing short of extraordinary.

On December 2, 2025, Chanel descended into the abandoned Bowery station in downtown Manhattan for what would become the most talked-about fashion event of the season. This was Matthieu Blazy's debut Métiers d'Art collection for the house — and the Belgian creative director announced himself with the confidence of someone who has nothing to prove and everything to say.

The guest list alone set the tone: A$AP Rocky and Margaret Qualley, newly minted Chanel ambassadors; Tilda SwintonKristen StewartSolange KnowlesLinda EvangelistaDapper Dan, and Jon Bon Jovi. Below street level, below the velvet ropes of the Upper East Side and the fashion week circuit, Chanel threw the most glamorous party the city's underground has ever seen.

THE VISION

Democracy as Luxury

Blazy's choice of venue was not an act of irony. It was a statement of philosophy. "The New York subway belongs to all," he wrote in his show notes. "Everyone uses it: there are students and gamechangers; statesmen and teenagers. It is a place full of enigmatic yet wonderful encounters, a clash of pop archetypes, where everyone has somewhere to go and each is unique in what they wear. Like in the movies, they are the heroes of their own stories."

For the clientele of tebougie.com — women who move between Brickell and Beverly Hills, between Art Basel dinners and Rodeo Drive boutiques — this collection speaks a language of confident individuality. Blazy didn't dress a type. He dressed everyone, which is precisely how the most luxurious fashion now operates.


The show was also a deeply personal homage to Chanel history. Gabrielle Chanel first visited New York in 1931, and the city fundamentally reshaped her perspective on the global reach of her own brand. Blazy completed that circle — returning to New York to reintroduce Chanel to a new generation of luxury consumers who discover brands on Instagram but choose them for their craftsmanship.

THE AESTHETIC

Art Deco Meets Downtown Grit

The 81-look collection was a cinematic cavalcade of archetypes: the socialite, the superhero, the ingénue, the working girl — and, in a breathtaking moment, Coco Chanel herself. Blazy orchestrated these characters across a runway that slipped between decades with audacity, letting 1920s Art Deco glamour collide with modern New York utility.

Standout moments included a translucent raincoat layered over a sequined cheetah-print ensemble— exactly the kind of off-duty luxury uniform that resonates with style-conscious women in Miami's Coconut Grove or Los Angeles's Bel Air. A cascading green leopard-print ballgown skirtpaired with a black turtleneck and heavy jewelry walked the fine line between uptown elegance and downtown fantasy.

The Chanel suit — the most iconic garment in fashion history — was reimagined in new silhouettes. Tweeds pushed the boundaries of what the atelier's hands could do. Trompe l'oeil, a Blazy signature honed at Bottega Veneta and Maison Margiela, appeared throughout, making the handmade look effortless and the complex look casual.

Colors ranged from rich ivory and deep burgundy to bold orange, forest green, and golden tones — a palette that photographs magnificently against the terracotta and cerulean backdrops of Miami's Design District or among the hills of Los Feliz. This is a collection made for women whose wardrobes are their autobiography.


THE CRAFTSMANSHIP

The Ateliers Behind the Magic

The Métiers d'Art collections — held annually since 2002 — exist to celebrate something almost extinct in fashion: true artisanal mastery. Each piece is a collaboration with one of Chanel's eleven Maisons d'art, housed at le19M, the creative hub the House inaugurated in Paris in 2021. For the 2026 collection, six ateliers contributed their irreplaceable savoir-faire:



This is the heart of what makes a Chanel Métiers d'Art piece different from anything else you can buy. In a world of fast fashion and machine-made luxury, these garments carry the fingerprints of the artisans who made them. For the discerning shopper — whether browsing on Worth Avenue or browsing tebougie.com late at night — that provenance is everything.



WHAT TO SHOP

The Pieces Worth Coveting

The Chanel Métiers d'Art 2026 collection is already landing in select boutiques. Here are the must-have categories defining the season for luxury shoppers from South Beach to Silver Lake.

  • The Mini Flap Bag
  • — In shearling lambskin (dark khaki) and shiny calfskin (dark burgundy with gold-tone hardware), the Mini Flap is the season's most-wanted accessory. Compact, structured, and instantly recognizable.The Maxi Flap in Leopard
  • — Blazy's slouchy, relaxed take on the Maxi Flap in bold leopard print is the season's statement bag. Equal parts downtown and uptown.The Reimagined Tweed Jacket
  • — Updated silhouettes in ivory/umber and white/black. The Chanel jacket remains the single greatest investment in a woman's wardrobe.The Sequin Flap Bag
  • — In mixed fibers with gold-tone hardware in orange and black, this bag moves from gallery openings to yacht decks without apology.The Evening Bag
  • — Lacquered metal and enamel in red, green, and gold. A Goossens collaboration that belongs in a museum — or on your arm at a charity gala.Embroidered Coats & Tops
  • — Montex-embroidered Art Deco motifs on wool and silk pieces that blur the boundary between garment and artwork.


Lesage

The world's greatest embroidery house, founded 1924. Every sequin, bead, and thread placed by hand.

Massaro

Chanel's legendary shoemaker, crafting footwear that moves between sculpture and utility.

Goossens

Jewelry and casting artisans whose work for Chanel dates to 1954. The 2026 collection featured hand-crafted deers, hummingbirds, and dalmatians in hammered, patinated metal.

Lemarié

Masters of featherwork and flowers, adding texture and dimension to garments since 1880.

Atelier Montex

Intricate Art Deco motifs, embroidered with a precision that makes each jacket a wearable fresco.

Maison Michel

Hat makers whose skills trace back to 14th-century Paris — carving shapes from wood, stretching and molding materials by hand.


"The collection felt like Blazy enthusiastically weaved in and out of the past and present, transforming a once antiquated social perspective into one favoured by all generations of women."