Distorted Tailoring Turns Aging and Memory Into Wearable Tension

Maison Mihara Yasuhiro has unveiled thee lookbook for its Fall/Winter 2026 collection, Eternal Now, turning blurred memory, aging and a missed train stop into one beautifully off-kilter wardrobe. First presented at Salle Wagram during Paris Fashion Week, the collection is now available through the label’s official store and selected stockists.
The emotional starting point comes from a prose poem written by Mihara Yasuhiro. In it, a passenger falls asleep during a dreamlike train ride, misses his station and watches the world outside lose its sharp contours. Concern over the destination slowly fades, while familiar objects remain emotionally vivid even as their outlines begin to blur.
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Enter Maison Mihara Yasuhiro’s Eternal Now
The Fall/Winter 2026 collection turns distorted tailoring, oversized outerwear and softened memory into a full wardrobe. Explore the official collection, then shop pieces inspired by its exaggerated proportions.
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That hazy journey becomes physical through misalignment and dissonance. Jackets sit too broad, sleeves extend too far and trousers gather heavily at the ankles. Tailoring remains recognizable—charcoal suits, striped shirts, pocket squares and regimental ties are all present—but familiar menswear codes have been nudged sideways until they feel remembered rather than perfectly recalled.
The strongest looks do not merely chase oversized volume. They suggest clothing borrowed from another person, inherited from another decade or pulled from a closet where memory has quietly rearranged the details. A glossy cognac leather puffer balloons through the shoulders, while layered shirting and fleece appear intentionally unfinished, as though each piece has slipped slightly out of alignment with the body beneath it.

The palette supports that fading sensation. Lavender, dusty pink and washed blue sit beside charcoal, deep navy and black, with warmer cognac leather breaking through like a memory that suddenly sharpens. Even the collection’s oversized eyewear connects to altered perception, framing the face through lenses that exaggerate the theme without turning it into costume.
Mihara’s established sneaker language remains part of the story too. Sculptural soles and softened edges create a sense of uncertain footing, while bags hang from unexpected positions and outerwear appears to pull away from conventional balance. Nothing is entirely wrong, yet almost everything feels slightly displaced—and that tension is exactly where the collection becomes interesting.
Eternal Now is reflective without becoming solemn. The garments accept imperfection, disorientation and change rather than trying to correct them. Aging is not presented as a clean progression toward wisdom, but as a strange overlap of movement and stillness: the train keeps going while certain memories remain fixed in place.
Inside Maison Mihara Yasuhiro’s Eternal Now Wardrobe
A selected edit from the Fall/Winter 2026 lookbook and Paris runway reveals the collection’s distorted suits, layered outerwear and softened proportions.




Selected looks from Maison Mihara Yasuhiro’s Fall/Winter 2026 Eternal Now collection. Lookbook images courtesy of Maison MIHARA YASUHIRO; Paris runway image via Hypebeast, photographed by Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto via Getty Images.
The full collection extends across tailoring, sportswear, knitwear, outerwear, accessories and footwear. This edit captures the central idea clearly enough: familiar clothes losing their edges without losing their emotional weight.
Source: Maison MIHARA YASUHIRO, MMSCENE and Hypebeast.





