John Richmond treats spring-summer 2026 like a night out. Culture Vulture, his latest collection, unfolded across London, Milan, and Paris, moving through clubs. In Covent Garden’s STEREO, models walked as if they had been pulled from the crowd itself.
The collection was shaped around subcultural collisions. Richmond reached back into his own archive of nightlife and drew out 70s soul boys, punk Americana, and goth romantics, blending them together until they felt contemporary again.
Lace vests rubbed against biker jackets, satin trousers carried industrial zips, sequins scrawled across tailoring like band posters on brick. The base was black and ivory, interrupted by streaks of turquoise, gold, and yellow that cut across the room like light off a mirror ball.
Lace tops slipped under tuxedo jackets, sequined shorts sagged with a casual weight, and satin dragged under boots. Culture Vulture made its point without subtlety. Richmond reminded the industry that rebellion still fits inside luxury, and that style holds meaning when it moves through the room with the same charge as a song.
John Richmond Spring/Summer 2026














