For its Fall/Winter 2026 collection, Off-White looks to a moment when music broke open. The collection is called “MR.DAVIS,” and it takes its cues from Miles Davis around 1970, the era of Bitches Brew, when he dissolved genres and jammed jazz together with rock, funk and electronics.

Creative director Ib Kamara spent time in the Miles Davis archive last year. He came away struck not just by the music, but by the attitude and the clothes. The collection traces what Kamara calls an unstable line, a place where disruption is not a style but a condition. Just as Miles lived in improvisation, in gestures that were never final, Off-White continues the work Virgil Abloh started: introducing small conceptual shifts that change how you see things.

Kamara was also drawn to the relationship between Miles and Betty Davis. He believes a woman can change a man’s universe completely. In this era, both Miles’s music and his style became wildly experimental. That energy runs through the collection.

The menswear follows the genre-bending energy of the music. Flared denim. Knitted shirts. Tailored vests and jackets that move between sharp and slouchy. Sartorial codes mix with a street-level ease. Materials feel worked and alive. Nothing sits still.

Kamara describes the collection as introducing a version of men who exist right now. An expansion of the universe Virgil built, where there is no wrong or right, just a collective of people pushing culture. And at the core, always, music.

Check it out below: