Saul Nash’s Masquerade Turns Power Dressing Into A Reveal

Saul Nash knows how to make clothes feel like they are already in motion, even when the image is standing perfectly still.
The London designer’s Fall/Winter 2026 campaign introduces the first drop of a collection titled Masquerade, with portraits photographed by Laura McCluskey. The mood sits right in that Nash pocket: athletic, sculptural, controlled, and just mysterious enough to make the viewer lean closer.
The campaign plays with the line between what is concealed and what is revealed, turning dressing into something more layered than a look. It is not costume. It is not armor. It is that stylish middle space where identity gets sharpened, softened, hidden, and announced all at once.
Step into the Saul Nash mood with the full campaign and a few sharp styling rabbit holes.
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Masquerade also carries the cultural charge of London through the frame. The collection returns to Hackney in spirit, reworking contemporary power dressing through Nash’s own language of movement, utility, and tension. It is the kind of fashion image that does not need to scream. It just stands there, perfectly aware that you are looking.
And that is the trick. Saul Nash can pull from sportswear without letting the clothes feel too casual, and from tailoring without letting the image go stiff. The result is a campaign that feels dressed for the street, the stage, the night bus, and some private internal ceremony all at once.
Inside the Masquerade campaign.
More portraits from the Saul Nash Fall/Winter 2026 campaign photographed by Laura McCluskey.
The campaign is handsome in the most useful way: not just “pretty image” handsome, but energy handsome. It has the feeling of a man choosing what to show, what to guard, and what to let the clothes say before he does.
We are always here for a fashion story that understands restraint as drama. Saul Nash gives Masquerade that quiet voltage: mystery, movement, and a little bit of dressed-up danger.
Sources: FY Magazine! provided the campaign details; PAUSE Online provided additional collection context.








