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John Galliano Returns to Fashion — and This Time, You Can Afford Him

March 17, 2026
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John Galliano Returns to Fashion — and This Time, You Can Afford Him

John Galliano, fashion’s mad genius, couturier and cautionary tale, is returning to store shelves near you. Only this time, he’s going mass.

In a reflection of the current disenchantment with luxury, the former Christian Dior and Maison Margiela designer, whose work recently fetched the highest price ever paid for a Dior dress at auction (637,500 euros after fees, or approximately $734,000) is joining forces … with Zara.

Mr. Galliano has entered a two-year partnership with the Spanish retailer to “re-author the brand’s archives,” according to an announcement on Tuesday morning. The designer will be “working directly with garments from Zara’s past seasons, deconstructing and reconfiguring them” into new collections that will be released twice a year, beginning in September. That means a line that is not upcycled, not recycled, but also not made from scratch — essentially a wearable look, reinvented.

The news marks Mr. Galliano’s first foray back into fashion since leaving Maison Margiela in late 2024 after 10 years, and his first foray into the more affordable end of the market. The September collection will also be his first since his ballyhooed couture show in January 2024, which involved world-building beneath a Parisian bridge, extreme corsetry and soaringly romantic fashion.

It is also the first time that Zara has signed such an extended partnership with a designer, though it has done one-off collaborations with names like Ludovic de Saint Sernin and Stefano Pilati (formerly of Saint Laurent).

Speculation about what Mr. Galliano might do next had been rife since his exit from Margiela. His name had been floated for various creative director jobs, but no one had predicted a mass market pivot.

Instead, something of a reassessment of Mr. Galliano’s career and contributions to fashion has been underway.

The designer, who was known for being as much a character as the characters he dressed (and as complicated), was cast out of the industry in 2011 after an anti-Semitic rant in a Paris bar, fired from the top job at Dior and convicted of a hate crime. But after a stint in rehab, an apology tour and his time at Margiela, he was largely re-embraced by fashion and the celebrity world. Vintage Galliano, either from his own label or from Dior, has become a red carpet staple. (The costume designer Miyako Bellizzi wore 1999 Galliano for Dior to the Oscars earlier this week.)

In January Mr. Galliano sat front row as a guest at the Dior couture show — his first time back at the house since he was fired — and was veritably mobbed by well-wishers.

At the time, gossip centered on the notion that he might be given a career retrospective at the Costume Institute of the Metropolitan Museum of Art or that he was poised to return to his namesake brand, which LVMH still owns. Apparently not.

Still, what exactly Galliano x Zara (if that is what the line will be called) will look like is not entirely clear. There were no specifics in the announcement about the name of the collection, Mr. Galliano’s official title or the prices. Even if the prices are on the higher end of the Zara scale, they will be in an entirely different, more affordable range than anything Mr. Galliano has done before. Neither Mr. Galliano nor Marta Ortega Pérez, the chair of Inditex, Zara’s parent company, and the women who reportedly cooked up the idea of the partnership, were available for comment.

What is clear, however, is that in joining forces with Zara, Mr. Galliano is part of a growing trend in fashion that has seen boldface designer names trade the runway for real life (or at least a somewhat more accessible version of it). In turn, mass-market brands are embracing the credibility and imagination that boldface names can bring them in an effort to distinguish themselves from ultrafast fashion retailers like Shein and Temu.

In 2024, Clare Waight Keller, the former creative director of Givenchy and the designer of Meghan Markle’s wedding dress, became the creative director of Uniqlo. That same year Zac Posen, former boy wonder of New York Fashion Week, joined Gap as its creative lead. And in 2025, Jonathan Saunders, designer of Diane von Furstenberg and his own label, moved on to become the chief creative officer of & Other Stories, part of H&M.

At a time when luxury is struggling with slowing consumer spending as well as a broader backlash against the soaring prices that have put even the smallest products out of the reach of most people, designer jobs have become ever more precarious. Mass-market retailers offer security, a broad infrastructure of support, relief from the pressures of the endless runway and access to an enormous market of people whom most high fashionistas have never dressed before.

In other words: an actual new look.

Vanessa Friedman has been the fashion director and chief fashion critic for The Times since 2014.

The post John Galliano Returns to Fashion — and This Time, You Can Afford Him appeared first on New York Times.

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