Balmain will be highly visible in the French capital during Paris Couture Week — even though it’s not staging a show.
On Friday, about 1,000 bus shelters, kiosks and subway entrances will debut creative director Antonin Tron’s first campaign for the French house, a “cinematic” effort with winks to strong female characters in the film noir genre.
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The campaign is part of a full-court press around Tron’s debut fall 2026 collection, which includes dedicated windows in a similar mood.
“We want to create consistency across all touch points,” Balmain chief executive officer Matteo Sgarbossa said in an exclusive interview. “It’s a 360-degree brand expression.”
July 8 is the official launch date for the Balmain fall 2026 collection in stores, but its Paris boutiques on Rue Saint-Honoré and Rue François-Ier are to receive the clothes and leather goods Friday, in tandem with the outdoor campaign.
In a separate interview over Teams from California, where Tron was shooting Balmain’s pre-spring 2027 collection look book and squeezing in some surfing, his passion, the designer shared the backstory behind the fall campaign.
“What was really important was to connect the first campaign to the show,” he said, referring to his runway display last March that boasted a “film noir” theme and a “Blade Runner”-esque set with shutters flickering open behind gauzy white curtains.
Tron titled the campaign “L’heure du Loup,” a play on the French expression “entre chien et loup” for the moment when evening yields to darkness and vision gets hazy.
The designer’s mood board for fall was peppered with scenes from dark-hearted movies: Tony Scott’s “The Hunger” and David Lynch’s 2001 thriller “Mulholland Drive” while the fall campaign has winks to Ingmar Bergman, and his avant-garde 1966 film “Persona.”
Tron didn’t balk when it was suggested one campaign image brought to mind Sharon Stone in “Basic Instinct,” which he considers a masterpiece, and starring another inspiring screen heroine. But he was thinking more about Liv Ullmann, a muse of Bergman’s.
“I wanted the campaign to feel like stills from a psychological thriller… with some subtle erotic tension in between the space [and] the woman,” he said.
As a backdrop, the designer chose John Lautner’s Harpel House as an emblematic example of a “modern living space.”
Spanish photographer Suffo Moncloa, known for his intense, slightly off-kilter portraits, captured models in key looks from the fall collection, including a pilot jacket in glossy leather with Joan Crawford shoulders that winked to a 1953 collection by founder Pierre Balmain.
Ahead of the shoot, Tron said he listened to some interviews Lynch gave in the midst of filming “Lost Highway.”
“He was explaining the directions he was giving to the actors on how to behave, and it’s something that we used to direct the models as well,” he said.
Tron said he plans to continue building on “cinematic” imagery, depicting “strong characters” with a vivid inner life, while also pursuing a “timeless quality.”
The designer plans to shoot subsequent campaigns “in very specific architectural sites, because Pierre Balmain studied architecture, and I have a strong relationship to it,” he said. “It’s a visual language that I want to continue and build over time.”
Matteo Sgarbossa
Sgarbossa said it was a strategic decision to concentrate media buys for the first campaign in the French capital.
“We want Paris to be the natural stage for this new chapter of Balmain, and this campaign has been designed to create this strong visibility and relevance as the fall-winter collection reaches the market,” he said.
In parallel, Balmain will introduce new packaging, labeling, and client experiences in boutiques.
“My goal is to bring back clarity in a moment when in the industry everyone is scrambling to face this challenging situation,” he said. “The priority is not to do any opportunistic move now, but more to strengthen the foundations of the house to fan desirability and assure sustainable growth.”
Meanwhile, Sgarbossa described the window displays as a “cinematic frame for the collection.”
“I want to ensure that every function of the house works in a very consistent way to deliver a strong and coherent brand expression,” he added, citing an “encouraging” reaction to the fall collection by VIP clients and Balmain’s key wholesale partners. “They are really embracing this new era.”
Launch Gallery: Antonin Tron's First Balmain Campaign
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