Pantone remains one of fashion’s most referenced colour authorities, setting the tone for how shade moves from concept to wardrobe. And, as temperatures drop, its tips for trends tend to land at exactly the right moment – when wardrobes start quietly self-editing.
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!Given that we’re about to enter a season when the same pieces resurface (although the way they’re worn changes), fabric weight increases and silhouettes gain more intention, Pantone’s AW26 colour predictions are a perfect complement to carrying the look. And they can be narrowed into three key directions — Arabian Spice, Green Envy and Festival Fuchsia — each one pulling dressing into a completely different mood.
Here’s how to use Pantone’s AW26 Colour Predictions to update your Winter wardrobe
Arabian Spice: The New Neutral With Depth
Described as a piquant brown with raw, earthy warmth, rich Arabian Spice sits in that rare category of colour that reads as both neutral and statement at once.
Less trend, more texture, on clothing and accessories, it becomes a grounding force — a colour that works hardest when everything else is doing less.
In practice, Arabian Spice shows up through pieces that feel tactile and lived-in: soft leather, warm-toned accessories, and finishes that lean into imperfection rather than polish. It pairs naturally with gold accents, bone neutrals, and washed-out creams, creating a palette that feels intentionally uncontrived.
The appeal lies in its ease. It’s not trying to reinvent colour theory – it’s simply reminding us that brown, done well, never really left.
GET THE LOOK
London Methow Roast Tumbled Leather, $625, by Birkenstock
Lemtosh Frames, $565, by Moscot
Green Envy: Nature, But Make It Modern
If Arabian Spice is grounding, Green Envy is refreshing. Rooted in earthy authenticity, it carries a sense of balance — part natural reference point, part modern luxury statement.
This isn’t a loud green. It’s considered. Muted, but not shy. The kind of tone that feels equally at home in a structured silhouette or a relaxed, oversized shape.
Green Envy works best when it’s allowed to be layered into a look rather than dominate it entirely. Think tonal dressing with subtle variation, or a single standout accessory that shifts an otherwise neutral outfit into something more directional.
There’s also a quiet versatility to it. It can lean utilitarian, especially when paired with natural textures and minimal lines, or veer slightly more elevated when introduced through refined finishes and structured tailoring.
Either way, it taps into something current: a desire for colour that feels connected to nature, but filtered through a contemporary lens.
GET THE LOOK
Kora Tote Bag in Olive, $379.95, by Jo Mercer
Liquid Veil Eyeshadow, $21.95, by Nude by Nature
Festival Fuchsia: Joy, Turned Up
Where the palette shifts entirely is with Festival Fuchsia. Vibrant, unapologetic and full of movement, this is the colour that refuses to sit quietly in the background.
Evoking a kind of carnival energy, Festival Fuchsia is about freedom more than refinement. It brings contrast into focus — not in a subtle way, but deliberately. It’s the kind of shade that changes the mood of an outfit instantly, whether worn head-to-toe or used as a single, intentional accent.
What makes it particularly relevant for AW26 is its emotional register. This isn’t colour for decoration alone; it’s colour as expression. There’s confidence built into it, but also playfulness — a reminder that dressing can still feel instinctive and unfiltered.
Paired with deeper tones or grounded neutrals, it creates tension in the best possible way. Left on its own, it becomes the focal point entirely.
Either approach works, because Festival Fuchsia doesn’t really ask for permission. It just shows up.
GET THE LOOK
Spa Du Maroc Hand Cream, $35, by Moroccanoil at Sephora
Plum Fluffy Everyday Jumper, $139.95, by Motto
The Mood Shift Behind the Palette
Taken together, these three Pantone AW26 shades reflect a broader shift in how we’re approaching seasonal dressing. There’s less emphasis on overhaul, more focus on evolution. Colour becomes the simplest way to signal change – not through reinvention, but refinement. And, as the season settles in, these colours offer more than just trend forecasting. They provide a framework – a way of thinking about fashion that feels like it’s meant to … fun!