Amiri Brings Hollywood Seduction to Paris Men’s SS27 With a Co-Ed Show at Le Carreau du Temple

Mike Amiri staged his Spring/Summer 2027 co-ed show at Le Carreau du Temple, the vaulted 19th-century iron-and-glass market hall in the 3rd arrondissement, transforming its industrial grandeur into a stage for Hollywood’s seductive glamour. The collection was the brand’s most ambitious Paris presentation to date, marrying Amiri’s Los Angeles rock-‘n’-roll sensibility with the architectural scale of a Parisian landmark.

Texture did the work of ornament. A hand-beaded fringe jacket required 180 hours of artisan labor; crystal embroidery on a men’s blazer caught the Carreau du Temple’s ironwork shadows. Leather goods featured a new structured bag silhouette—the Amiri Temple Bag—crafted from calfskin with a brass closure modeled after vintage Hollywood jewelry. The accessories line has become a growing revenue driver for the brand, and this season’s offerings suggest a push toward daily-wear rather than occasion-only pieces.

The co-ed format allowed Amiri to expand his vocabulary across menswear and womenswear within a single narrative. Men’s tailoring leaned into a relaxed Hollywood tuxedo vernacular: jackets cut with a soft, unpadded shoulder in black mohair and silk-wool blends, trousers falling with a gentle break over patent-leather derbies. A fringed suede jacket in tobacco—a piece that could exist in a 1970s Steve McQueen film—captured the collection’s tonal reference point.

Women’s looks moved through similar terrain with an added layer of constructed drama: bias-cut silk slip dresses with crystal-embroidered straps, tailored blazers worn as dresses, and a series of sheer organza blouses with cuffs that extended past the hand. The silhouette language—relaxed on top, defined at the waist, elongated below—created a visual rhythm that worked across both categories.

Le Carreau du Temple proved an inspired setting: the contrast between the venue’s 19th-century iron bones and Amiri’s sun-drenched California vocabulary created a productive tension. The collection itself operated in a similar register—formal enough for the Paris setting, relaxed enough to read as authentic to the brand’s origins. For Mike Amiri, this was a show that confirmed his house can operate on the global stage without losing its accent.

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