Paris street style shifts
Paris street style this season is leaning into inventive layering and neutrals while reworking early‑2020s silhouettes — trend writeups flagged new proportions and runway‑meets‑art styling (semisustainable.substack.com). Maison de l’Amérique Latine also hosted “L’atelier d’art,” a contemporary art‑meets‑fashion show that’s bleeding runway codes into everyday outfits (natlawreview.com).
Dazed published a 38-image street‑style gallery from Paris Fashion Week AW26 on March 19, 2026, crediting photographer Yu Fujiwara for the photo set (dazeddigital.com) (dazeddigital.com). Marie Claire reported fashion photographer Darrel Hunter — known online as @modehunter — was on site throughout the week documenting high‑frequency street looks outside multiple shows (marieclaire.com) (marieclaire.com). Whitewall’s March 13, 2026 recap described AW26 as a season defined by “sophomore” collections and a noticeably coherent mood, a runway narrative critics said translated into the street’s updated proportions (whitewall.art) (whitewall.art). Maison de l’Amérique Latine opened the interdisciplinary exhibition “L’atelier d’art. Rencontre des mondes” on March 6, 2026, with the program curated by Anna Sashina (menafn.com) (menafn.com). The venue’s opening included a performance by soprano Anna Dudina and showed work by contributors such as Michel Juvet (Majicmiju) and photographer Sheila A., underscoring the show’s blend of fashion imagery and contemporary art (menafn.com) (menafn.com). Roundups from MOJEH and L’OFFICIEL flagged repeat street motifs — pinstripes, quirky shirts and scarves, and oversized outerwear — that appeared across editors’ and influencers’ looks during the week (mojeh.com) (mojeh.com). Photographers and features also called out more idiosyncratic formulas seen on the pavements, including layered bras-over-shirts and suggestive T‑shirt distressing, which were captured in multiple outlet galleries (dazeddigital.com) (dazeddigital.com).