Sacai presented its Spring-Summer 2027 menswear collection in Paris this season, with Chieko Murai continuing to refine the brand’s signature approach to hybrid construction. The show marked another chapter in Sacai’s evolution from a niche Japanese label into a globally recognized architecture of clothing that resists easy categorization.
The collection’s central gesture was a series of hybrid outerwear pieces that combined the volume of a field jacket with the tailoring discipline of a blazer. The trompe-l’oeil effect that has become Sacai’s calling card was present but deployed with greater restraint than in past seasons — Murai allowed the fabric transitions to speak without the visual punctuation of exposed zippers and contrasting sleeves.
The Spring 2027 collection demonstrated that Sacai has found a rhythm that works: recognizable enough to satisfy its loyal customer base, but with enough new ideas to keep the brand from becoming predictable. In a season of debuts and reinventions, Murai’s steady hand made a compelling argument for evolution over revolution.
Sacai’s women’s and menswear have increasingly converged in silhouette and construction logic. This season’s shared vocabulary — the same fabric treatments, the same proportion shifts — suggests a house moving toward a unified design language across genders, a strategy that makes both commercial and creative sense for a brand of Sacai’s scale.
Murai played with the tension between military utility and civilian tailoring, pairing a parachute-nylon coat with a worsted-wool trouser cut to a generous but controlled line. The fabric contrast did the work that graphics might have done in another designer’s hands: the matte nylon against the wool’s soft sheen created a surface-level drama that sustained the collection through its quieter moments.


