The Corporate Uniform, Unbuttoned
For decades, the crisp, collared shirt has been the bedrock of professional menswear. Tucked in, buttoned up, and often confined beneath a blazer, it signaled seriousness, discipline, and a cog-in-the-machine reliability. It was the antithesis of leisure,
sensuality, and personal expression. But this season in Paris, a city that sets the global tone for men's style, that foundation was deliberately and beautifully dismantled. The most talked-about collections presented a new vision for this wardrobe staple. At Dries Van Noten, a master of intellectual romance, shirts were diaphanous and fluid, left unbuttoned to the sternum to float away from the body as models walked. They were paired not with sensible trousers, but with shorts or languid, wide-leg pants, suggesting a man who has clocked out of the office and is heading somewhere far more interesting.
A City-Wide Conspiracy
This wasn't a one-off gimmick; it was a theme that echoed across the city. At AMI, Alexandre Mattiussi offered his signature Parisian cool with perfectly oversized poplin shirts worn like jackets over bare chests, sleeves rolled up with nonchalant ease. Loewe’s Jonathan Anderson continued his exploration of surreal, everyday luxury, presenting shirts with elongated proportions or crafted from materials that subverted their stiff reputation. Even at legacy houses, the shirt was loosened from its formal moorings. The collective message was clear: the basic button-down is no longer just for Zoom calls and quarterly reviews. It’s now a canvas for a more relaxed, confident, and subtly seductive mode of dressing. The new uniform isn't about fitting in, but about standing out with a quiet confidence.
More Than a Trend, It's a Mood
So why is this happening now? The trend speaks directly to our evolving relationship with work and formality. The post-pandemic world has irrevocably blurred the lines between our professional and personal lives. The office itself is no longer a fixed location, and its dress codes have softened accordingly. This new take on shirting feels like a direct response. It’s a way of taking a symbol of the old world—the rigid, hierarchical workplace—and reclaiming it for the present. By unbuttoning the shirt, allowing it to flow, and pairing it with informal pieces, designers are proposing a new kind of power dressing. This version isn't about asserting authority over others, but about expressing a comfortable authority over oneself. It’s a statement that you can be both serious and sensual, put-together and at ease. This shift also reflects a broader evolution in modern masculinity, one that embraces softness and vulnerability alongside traditional strength.
From Runway to Your Wardrobe
While a sheer, navel-grazing shirt might feel like a stretch for a Tuesday night dinner, the spirit of the trend is surprisingly easy to adopt. It’s less about a specific item and more about a new way of styling. Start by rethinking the fabric. Swap out your stiff, non-iron cotton for something with more life—a silk blend, a fine-gauge linen, or a soft Tencel. Pay attention to fit, but not in the old way. Instead of a slim, tailored cut, look for a slightly more relaxed or oversized silhouette that gives you room to move. The key is in the styling. Try leaving one or two more buttons undone than you normally would under a casual blazer. Wear a crisp white shirt untucked over dark jeans or chinos for a high-low look. The goal isn’t to look sloppy, but to look intentional in your relaxation. It’s about signaling that you know the rules of dress, but you’ve chosen to elegantly bend them.













