
Fursac’s spring-summer 2026 campaign continues the French label’s recent rework of tailoring, though the mood shifts noticeably from the theatrical tension of last season toward something more restrained. Clément Chabernaud returns after fronting the brand’s fall-winter 2025 advertisement, captured here with a cooler, more reduced stance.
Fursac Spring/Summer 2026 Campaign

Photographer Phil Engelhardt strips the images down to a white backdrop and hard light. Set designer Frédérick Asséo keeps the staging to a metal stool and a wire chair, and the emptiness around the props matters as much as the objects themselves. The reduced setting sharpens attention toward proportion, fabric, and the small adjustments inside the styling.

Those adjustments hold the collection together. A black leather peacoat opens over a fine blue stripe shirt and white trousers, though the sharpness of the look softens through the way the coat folds across the body.

A dark suit drops into a long trouser break over polished loafers, worn with a knit draped loosely across the shoulders where most stylists would tie it neatly. A flecked tweed blazer appears over an open white shirt and taupe pleated trousers cut wider through the leg.

Stylist Jérôme André keeps redirecting classic menswear codes by narrow degrees. A sage green blazer arrives with a paisley tie and dark trousers. A stand-collar mac is photographed in severe side profile. A double-breasted suit replaces the expected shirt and tie combination with a black quarter-zip knit zipped high against the neck. Even the knitwear and denim hold the same controlled line running through the tailoring.

That restraint gives unusual weight to the smallest details. Clément’s small gold hoop earring catches the light in nearly every frame, the lone decorative flourish on a man who wears the clothes with accidental charm.








