Kidsuper Fall/Winter 2026 – 2027 / FW26 at Paris Men’s Fashion Week entitled OUTSIDE THE BOX
KidSuper has long been defined by risk. Not risk as provocation, but as curiosity. Creative, emotional, strategic. Eachseason, Colm Dillane has presented a Paris Fashion Week show that audiences recognize as spectacle. What has beenless visible is how many of these moments functioned as proof of concept, quietly opening doors to theater, comedy, publishing, sport, and film. Fashion, here, operated as a testing ground.
KidSuper built its following long before its Paris shows reached their current scale. But during the early months of the pandemic, when the industry was forced to rethink how creativity could exist without physical proximity, the shift became impossible to ignore. Dillane responded not by waiting, but by writing. Original short films, conceived, written, and directed by Dillane, became vessels for storytelling when clothes alone were not enough. Intimate, strange, funny, and deeply human.
For Kidsuper FW26 / Fall/Winter 2026 – 2027, Dillane returned to cinema. The show opened with an original short film, filmed in Paris, written and directed by Dillane, and starring Vincent Cassel. An emblematic figure of French cinema, Cassel’s early work left a lasting impression on a young Dillane. Like Ronaldinho walking the KidSuper runway seasons ago, the gesture was about continuity. A childhood reference made real.
The film established the emotional architecture of the collection. A world that felt familiar yet unstable. Repetition, glitches, memory, and performance blurred the line between what was staged and what was lived. A character searched for meaning inside increasingly automated systems, asking a quiet but unsettling question: if everything feels scripted, where does humanity live? That tension carried onto the runway.
Kidsuper FW26 / Fall/Winter 2026 – 2027 collection explored cinematic archetypes. Legends and icons sat beside personal references. Childhood role models shared space with modern heroes. Dreamlike has always been central to KidSuper’s language, but this season it was filtered through the film’s darker, more introspective tone. Reflection, restraint, and maturity entered with new weight. In a meta gesture, thinking outside the box turned inward. The collection became a self-aware exercise for a brand long associated with maximal expression, allowing quiet, structure, and intention to shape the clothes. It asked how evolution can happen without losing curiosity, and how growth can remain true to its own mythology.
Kidsuper FW26 / Fall/Winter 2026 – 2027 collaboration continued as narrative. A limited collaboration with Jameson drew on ideas of craft, lineage, and shared heritage, subtly referencing Dillane’s Irish roots and Jameson’s long tradition of making, and opened a sequence of forth coming reveals. Appearing on the runway, the pieces functioned as another layer in a collection concerned with memory, continuity, and cultural exchange. The show also teased an upcoming collaboration with Havaianas, a quiet nod to Dillane’s time in Brazil as a young soccer player and the cultural exchanges that shaped him. Further reinforcing this idea of continuity, Jeff Hamilton walked the runway wearing an exclusive jacket he designed incollaboration with KidSuper for the upcoming Super Bowl, following their initial jacket collaboration last season.
In the final gesture, film and show folded back into one another. What was real. What was performed. What we inherit. What we choose. If fashion has always been a stage for KidSuper, this season asked what happens when the curtain lifts and the story keeps going.










































All images Kidsuper FW26 / Fall/Winter 2026 – 2027 by the brand. PR Agency KCD World Wide and Rep Agency.