Bottega Veneta fall 2026 arrives as Louise Trotter’s first full fall and winter collection for the house, photographed by Chris Rhodes with a quiet, seasonal sensibility, the brand said. The campaign links indoor domestic detail with open outdoor vistas to suggest a slow shift from spring into autumn.

The visual narrative stages scenes inspired by Venetian life, from aged wallpaper and patched tile floors to broad canals and historic architecture. Set design moves smoothly between rooms and water, creating a backdrop that highlights contrasts in material and tone, the label said.

Materials and finishing define the collection, with contrasts between matte and softly reflective surfaces. Leather outerwear in black and white meets quilted handbags and sequined cuffs, a restrained approach that amplifies texture rather than flash.

Bottega Veneta fall 2026, the bags and the Intrecciato thread
Handbags remain central to the season, with the maison’s signature Intrecciato weaving given longer, more fluid lines across classic silhouettes. The Madison shoulder bag, Barbara tote, and the broader Veneta family arrive in new autumnal colors that skew calm and muted to reflect the seasonal theme.
The pieces keep practical structure while using woven texture to increase visual recognition, the company noted. Colorways favor grounded neutrals and softened tones, chosen to pair with both indoor moments and canal side scenes.

Shoes, styling, and the collection’s mood
Shoes are pared back to match the collection’s quiet language, with the Ventura loafers offered in a new black finish that favors clean lines and everyday wearability. The shoe silhouette avoids extraneous decoration, aiming for flexibility between casual and more formal looks.
Across outfits, the campaign seeks a balance between day to day ease and considered finish, connecting scenes and garments so that each piece suggests a particular moment in a daily rhythm. That sense of context is central to how the house presents the season, Louise Trotter said in a statement accompanying the campaign.
Photographer Chris Rhodes framed the series with attention to small domestic details and the broader urban landscape, according to the release. The resulting imagery emphasizes texture and depth, inviting wearers to imagine the pieces as part of lived environments rather than solely as isolated objects.
For shoppers and editors, the Bottega Veneta fall 2026 campaign signals a wardrobe built on tactile contrasts and muted color that moves naturally from indoor settings to the water side. The brand said pieces will roll out to boutiques and e commerce channels in the coming months.



