Romeo Hunte’s Fall/Winter 2026 Turns Gotham Hall Into a Showcase of East Flatbush Luxury
“It’s polished and unpretentious, this collection is structured- relaxation. Hunte is a designer fluent in uptown tailoring and downtown ease.”
If Ralph Lauren were a Caribbean from East Flatbush, what would a fall/winter collection look like? Romeo Hunte has an idea.
The eponymously named brand is known for its casual streetwear coolness and is, naturally, beloved by many Black celebrities, including Zendaya, Beyoncé, Laverne Cox, and Winnie Harlow. On a brisk Midtown evening, inside a dark and moody Gotham Hall, Hunte presented his Fall/Winter 2026 collection beneath vaulted ceilings that felt almost cathedral-like. But the guests were anything but subdued. There was a pulse in the room — jubilant, anticipatory — as editors, stylists, and tastemakers arrived in what could only be described as elevated formal streetwear.
Likewise, the collection blended casual denim with breezy button-ups and tees, pushing the fabric beyond its expected utility. Some denim looks were transformed into structured and innovative pieces (hello, denim puffer vest!). Of course, you had your denim moto jackets and trenches. But Hunte stretched the language of denim further with Look 14: lined, baggy denim pants finished with a corset-like waist — a precise reimagining of the everyday jean.
Another fun detail is the polka dots. Polka dots are a pattern that never gets taken too seriously. But what if they’re all over an evening suit, a tie, or a buttoned blouse? Hunte answered with conviction. Boxy polka-dotted suits and skirt ensembles were walking contradictions, balancing whimsy with authority as they moved down the runway in full confidence and swagger.



If there’s anything Romeo Hunte knows how to do well, it’s outerwear. The show’s second act belonged to it. Sleek, boldly colored trench coats commanded attention, while sweater vests bedazzled with tiny locks — reminiscent of those fastened to the Brooklyn Bridge — added a distinctly New York texture. Black furred coats of varying lengths followed, dramatic yet controlled. A subtle Parisian thread ran through the styling: berets tilted just so, and a graffiti-ed Mona Lisa splashed across hooded blouses and the backs of jackets, merging European iconography with Brooklyn grit.
Romeo Hunte’s Fall/Winter 2026 proves that high fashion can have swag. The collection doesn’t take itself too seriously while still maintaining the integrity of style in daytime pieces and the allure and sexiness of evening wear. It is polished but unpretentious, structured yet relaxed — a designer fluent in both uptown tailoring and downtown ease.
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