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Among the most striking and original voices in contemporary haute couture, Sylvio Giardina has made a powerful return to Paris with his Autumn/Winter 2025–2026 Collection. Renowned for his sculptural vision and avant-garde craftsmanship, the Italian-born designer — once part of the official Haute Couture Federation — presents a body of work that is simultaneously intimate and theatrical, artistic and wearable.
Though created entirely in his Roman atelier, the collection holds a Franco-Italian spirit, with fabrics sourced from both nations. Yet its true strength lies in its concept: a reflection on personal archives, instinct, and transformation. “It was time to take stock,” Sylvio shared as he guided me through the collection. “I revisited my past work — not to repeat it, but to see it anew. To observe what has changed, and what continues to move me.”
That emotional honesty is woven into every look. With just ten couture pieces, the presentation was intentionally precise and focused. Each garment is either fully handmade or meticulously hand-finished, shaped directly on Stockman mannequins in a tactile dialogue between hand and material. The result: couture that feels alive, intimate, and utterly original.
Giardina’s signature sculptural silhouettes are present throughout. Materials are transformed — French lace is shredded into fringes, velvet is sliced and restructured with silk and metallic threads, while silk is pleated and layered into fluid forms. One standout piece is a luminous organza dress: “We printed the fabric with rays and weighted shapes,” Sylvio explained. “Then we cut it into tubes and applied them to the base. It creates dimension, movement, texture.” Another was crafted from metallic pleats interwoven with silk threads, hand-embellished with tiny crystals—a dress that shimmers like molten glass under the light.
The collection is also imbued with the instinctive presence of wild animals — foxes, wolves, hybrid creatures—brought to life through illusion and impeccable artistry. “They’re not real,” Sylvio said. “It’s all theatre, like Cinecittà. That’s where the fantasy lives.” These creatures emerge across the garments and also inspire the striking headpieces, which evoke ritual and raw emotion rather than mere ornament. “They’re not accessories,” he said. “They’re part of the soul of the collection.”
The emotional centrepiece is a silk white dress that reminds Sylvio of oil — its shifting sheen and organic movement echoing his own journey between fluidity and structure, memory and invention. Another piece references the legend of the she-wolf who nurtured Romulus and Remus—the mythical birth of Rome. “I’m not from Rome,” he told me. “I’m Sicilian. But I was born in Paris. I’ve always moved between places. This collection is like that — it’s a hybrid of everything I’ve lived.”
Sylvio Giardina’s return is not nostalgic — it is bold, grounded, and forward-looking. A graceful blend of strength and fragility, instinct and intellect. In an industry that constantly reinvents itself, his work reminds us that couture still possesses the power to surprise, move, and transform.
I left the presentation deeply inspired — and I cannot wait to see these breathtaking creations come alive on the runway.
— SUNA MOYA
SYLVIO GIARDINA
A Triumphant Return to Paris with a Bold, Sculptural Couture Collection.