Proenza Schouler Fall 2026: Rachel Scott’s Relaxed New Era Begins

The most anticipated debut of New York Fashion Week belonged to Rachel Scott, who presented her first full collection for Proenza Schouler on February 11 . After founders Jack McCollough and Lazaro Hernandez departed for Loewe, Scott stepped into one of American fashion’s most significant roles .

Here’s everything you need to know.

The Vision

Scott spent months studying the brand’s archive and sitting with actual customers . Her conclusion? The Proenza woman is evolving.

“She can be a bit more erotic, she can be angry, sometimes she’s not quite so perfect,” Scott explained . In her show notes, she added: “Today, she was in a rush” .

This sense of intentional imperfection ran through the entire collection. Dresses were slightly rumpled. Draping and tucks were deliberately “a little off” .

The Aesthetic

  • Silhouettes: “Relaxed and undone,” twisted against traditional ideals of polish . Turtlenecks and blazers buttoned all the way up. Some dresses had waists just below the bra line, creating endless legs .
  • Texture as Language: “Even though things will look clean, when you get close, there’s a little something for the woman,” Scott said . This meant chiné weavingchenille check details on houndstooth, and fringe accents .
  • The Orchid Print: A recurring print derived from digitally manipulated photographs of night orchids—organic yet engineered .
  • Color Story: Muted creams, grays, taupe, and black, punctuated by “blasts of red and blue” and deep orchid purples .

The Vibe: Disciplined Minimalism & Confidence in House DNA

Rachel Scott faced a delicate task: honoring Proenza Schouler’s founders while making the house her own. Her approach? Measured restraint over radical reinvention.

The collection excelled in polish, proportion, and control—hallmarks of a designer earning trust rather than chasing headlines. But that same caution raised questions. Taste was abundant; risk was not.

There’s something refreshing in Scott’s refusal to posture. No theatrical stunts. No grasping for relevance. Just grounded, elegant clothes. Yet in a fashion moment craving distinct voices, one wonders: when will we see her fingerprint on the house?

Collection Highlights

  • Opening Look: A teal sheath dress with an uneven, tactile surface made of double-faced wool with multispeckled yarn .
  • Tailoring: Skirt suits, remixed sailor pants with buttons askew, and a houndstooth trench with chenille check details .
  • Eveningwear: Floral print dresses with asymmetric handkerchief hems, fringe, and grommets—layered for the modern urban woman .
  • Accessories: The Hex bag (from 2016) returned. New bowling bags (mini and maxi), bucket bags in calf hair and suede, and kitten heels with extra-sharp toes .

The Front Row

Fellow designers Christopher John Rogers, Maria Cornejo, Veronica Leoni, and Raul Lopez attended. Also spotted: Yerin Ha (Bridgerton), director Celine Song, and Tommy Dorfman .

Why It Matters

Scott brings fresh momentum—she won the CFDA Award for Womenswear Designer of the Year in 2024, the first Black female designer to do so . Her challenge now is translating the cult appeal of Diotima to an established label .

If this first collection is any indication, the Proenza Schouler woman is in capable hands. Polished yet real. Crafted yet effortless. Beautifully, deliberately imperfect.

Author: Fashion Events

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