Greta Constantine Resort 2027
Greta Constantine Resort 2027 collection, runway looks, beauty, models, and reviews.

Reported by Vogue.
Twenty years in, Jamaican-Canadian designer Kirk Pickersgill isn't reinventing himself — he's refining. His Greta Constantine Resort 2027 collection, which he titled "Next," came directly out of a milestone anniversary that had him thinking less about disruption and more about doubling down. "My answer to that is, I'm just going to keep doing what I've been doing," Pickersgill told Vogue — and in his hands, that reads as confidence, not complacency.
The inspiration was rooted in memory: Sunday Best, specifically the vibrant, dressed-up energy of church crowds from his childhood. Pickersgill recalled his mother coordinating his sisters like twins, him in the matching boy version, the whole congregation a wash of joyful color. That pastel warmth threads through the entire resort offering — minty greens, buttery yellows, blush pinks — with a sweetness that never tips into saccharine.
From Pew to Party
Daytime pieces carried the collection's lightest, most lifted energy. A minty-green floral-appliquéd cotton maxi skirt paired against a crisp white puffed-sleeve shirt had the kind of effortless polish that looks expensive without trying. A butter-yellow tunic — high-necked, billowing, with an extraordinary drape — is the rare piece that genuinely needs nothing else around it. The one stumble: light-blue sequin jeans styled with a logo tee reading simply "Greta." Logomania is a choice, and here it was an unnecessary one.
Evening is where Greta Constantine reliably earns its reputation, and Resort 2027 is no exception. A floor-length soft-pink caftan in gauzy sequin hit the exact frequency between ethereal and festive. For the more understated customer, a black strapless gown offered architectural ruffle detailing and a built-in white chiffon scarf at the neck — wearable draped over one shoulder or cascading down the back. It's the kind of versatility that makes a dress feel like a decision rather than a default.
Pickersgill has always designed for women who want range — from whisper-quiet to full spectacle — and Resort 2027 delivers exactly that spectrum. "I'd love to see someone wear this to church — now that would be fascinating," he said. Two decades in, his vision is sharp, his customer is loyal, and the next chapter looks a lot like the best version of everything that came before it.
When a designer knows exactly who he's dressing and refuses to apologize for it, the clothes speak for themselves.
Read the original at Vogue.


