Longchamp's Fall 2025 Collection Celebrates Craft and Contemplation
This Fall, the Longchamp woman returns to her creative roots — Embracing the power behind her hands and what they can create.
This Fall, Longchamp steps back from the noise and spectacle, retreating into something quieter, richer, more intentional. The Fall 2025 collection is a celebration of craft — not just as an aesthetic, but as a philosophy. It's a tribute to what the human hand can shape when given the time and space to create with purpose.
The Longchamp woman is, as ever, unmistakably Parisienne: grounded yet glamorous, effortlessly chic without trying too hard. She isn’t chasing trends — she’s charting her own rhythm. And this season, she’s turning inward, trading the dizzy pace of summer soirées for the meditative calm of the studio. Longchamp casts her as a modern-day artisan, reconnecting with materials and making things that matter.
Creative Director Sophie Delafontaine puts it plainly: “The Fall 2025 collection, in both ready-to-wear and accessories, bears the inimitable imprint of the human hand. Artisans all share a true sensibility for materials — whether that is wood, stone, fabric or leather… The sensoriality of touch and texture is the keynote of this season.”
The ready-to-wear offering leans into the codes of workwear — utility cuts, sturdy materials, deliberate silhouettes. It’s not about being precious, it’s about being present. Earthy hues dominate: paper, ecru, mahogany, stone and ebony. Every stitch and seam echoes a quiet dedication to craft. The woman who wears these clothes isn’t just dressing up; she’s preparing to make something.
Accessories follow suit, with new interpretations of the Le Pliage family. The artist’s basket and the half-moon Le Pliage Xtra nod to the ceramics studio — a recurring reference point. Picture a ceramist at her wheel: sleeves rolled, hands steady, spinning life into form. Her wardrobe mirrors her craft — organic, irregular, authentic. Even the ornamental grooves of her pottery reappear as crochet details on the Le Pliage Filet bag.
Tying in with the focus on craft, Longchamp has collaborated with French illustrator, painter and ceramist Constantin Riant. His work — rooted in manual gestures and graphic simplicity — shapes a capsule rendered entirely in thick cotton canvas, in workwear’s traditional palette of blue and white. Riant’s emblem for Longchamp stitches past to present: the tools of the trade, the maison’s original leather-covered pipes, the iconic Le Pliage, even a plane and a ship — a nod to travel, heritage and movement.
“My collaboration with Longchamp brings to life my wanderings through Paris, seeking out neighbourhood artisans,” Riant shared. “I work with solid colour, and here the two-tone palette of blue and white highlights the plays on typography. In fact, my designs evoke the importance of the manual gesture for both artisans and artists.”
The result is a collection that goes beyond fashion. It's about pausing, making, and returning to what truly matters. In a world spinning faster every day, Longchamp’s Fall 2025 offering is a quiet manifesto for slowing down — for valuing process over product, substance over spectacle. It’s about what’s built to last, both in our wardrobes and in our lives.
Longchamp's Fall 2025 collection is available in stores and online here.