Pedro Pascal Tries Out the Double V-Neck Look for Spring
This plunging silhouette is making a comeback

Reported by Harper's Bazaar.
The V-neck never really died — it just waited for the right moment. According to Harper's Bazaar, what was once the signature silhouette of emo bands and Brooklyn cool guys has quietly staged a full-scale runway takeover, with Chanel, Prada, and Dior all leaning hard into plunging necklines and angular cuts for spring 2026. The memo has officially left the building.
Leave it to Pedro Pascal to be the one who cements it. The Emmy nominee — who has made a habit of treating red carpets like a personal fashion statement, from thigh-high leather boots to politically loaded tees — showed up to a London fan event for his upcoming Star Wars film The Mandalorian and Grogu in a custom Chanel by Matthieu Blazy look styled by his longtime collaborator Jamie Mizrahi. If you were expecting a standard celebrity press circuit moment, think again.
The Case for Layering Your Necklines
Pascal didn't just wear a V-neck. He wore two — a gray and butter yellow pair, layered and visible beneath a navy single-breasted blazer left deliberately open. Dark-blue slacks pulled the suiting element together without tipping into overdressed territory. The result read effortlessly undone in exactly the way that takes real precision to pull off. The detail that elevated the whole thing? A Jessica McCormack Medallions Long Guard Lapis Diamond 30" necklace — Lapis Lazuli beads threaded through white and yellow gold diamonds — that mirrored the blue-and-gold palette of the outfit without a single overcalculated beat. Black Chanel eyeglasses and inky loafers closed it out cleanly.
The double V-neck sits neatly inside a broader spring obsession with duplication — double belts, layered shirts, stacked accessories. It's maximalism with restraint, which is a harder needle to thread than it sounds. Pascal's version worked because each layer had a distinct purpose: the color contrast, the neckline depth, the way the blazer framed both without smothering either.
When the catwalks and the red carpet align this sharply, the trend has already moved past conversation — the only question left is how you make it yours.
Read the original at Harper's Bazaar.


