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Burberry Rebuilds the Classic Trench Coat for Winter 2026

Burberry Rebuilds the Classic Trench Coat for Winter 2026

[original_title

Burberry abandons daytime utility to build a wardrobe entirely focused on the grit and glamour of London after midnight.

Burberry Fall 2026 Collection

You don’t need press release Daniel Lee quotes to tell you the BURBERRY Fall 2026 collection is built for a specific kind of night out.

That post-midnight energy saturates every piece. London after dark provides the blueprint here, moving the focus from daytime utility to heavy evening atmosphere. The design team remakes traditional rainwear into fluid faille trench coats and pleated silk poplin layers.

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Burberry Fall 2026 Collection
Burberry Fall 2026 Collection
Burberry Fall 2026 Collection
Burberry Fall 2026 Collection
Burberry Fall 2026 Collection
Burberry Fall 2026 Collection

Those soft fabrics meet heavy leather treatments across the lineup. Butter-soft plongé forms shawl-collar coats and full suits. Rugged biker jackets, down-filled parkas, and quilted bombers abandon their usual nylon for full hide construction. Shearling shows up raw-edged on chunky knits and collars.

Necklines and trims point to a thorough review of house codes. Throat latches appear on double-faced wool pea coats. Epaulettes drop onto brushed mohair hoodies and rib-knit dresses. Hand-woven traditional looms churn out bordeaux red and ink blue leather and viscose strands, building a heavily textured check.

Burberry Fall 2026 Collection
Burberry Fall 2026 Collection
Burberry Fall 2026 Collection
Burberry Fall 2026 Collection
Burberry Fall 2026 Collection
Burberry Fall 2026 Collection

That detailed patterning finds its match in the atelier’s hand-finished beadwork. Bugle beads run down trouser legs to mimic falling rain. Thousands of hand-stitched sequins cover knit and tabard dresses, catching the light like wet pavement. Bias-cut satin pieces come loaded with scarves and fringed tassels.

Fringing and fluid shapes contrast with the sharp tailoring. The menswear takes apart familiar shapes, and women receive relaxed fits cut from double-faced cashmere and grain de poudre wool. Tuxedos and double-breasted overcoats feature leather-peaked lapels and shearling trims. Pocket squares fold into roses next to silk shirts bearing an embroidered ‘B’ at the cuff.

Those cuffs sit against a rich, dark color board. Black and champagne white anchor the lineup. Jewel tones punch through the dark brown, burgundy, plum purple, and ink blue bases.

Burberry Fall 2026 Collection
Burberry Fall 2026 Collection
Burberry Fall 2026 Collection
Burberry Fall 2026 Collection
Burberry Fall 2026 Collection
Burberry Fall 2026 Collection

Dark tones ground the cobbler-inspired footwear. Hand-applied coloring builds a unique patina after each shoe is built. Pillar pumps and Windermere Oxfords feature classic broguing mixed with check and mini-studs. Motorcycle boots swap out archival motoring gear for a solid-color city staple, and caged Linton sandals weave buttery nappa leather with chainmail.

Chainmail and heavy metal dictate the bag updates. Slim shoulder bags hang from sculptural metal straps, updating the equestrian Bridle shape. Tactile elements dominate the finishes, bringing in whipstitched leather flowers and intarsia shearling to close out the look.


In this article:







Daniel Lee







Burberry

#Burberry #Rebuilds #Classic #Trench #Coat #Winter title_words_as_hashtags]

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After slow career start, Priya Ghanghas prepares for big step up in Asian Championships final <div id="content-body-70837587" itemprop="articleBody"><p>On her senior international debut, the 20-year-old who once struggled to win a district title beat a former world champion en route to the final of the women’s 60kg category in the Continental Championships.</p><p>It’s not easy for ambitious young boxers to get admitted to the Boxing Academy at the Sports Authority of India centre in Bhiwani. The academy—where Olympians including Akhil Kumar, Vijender Kumar, Manish Kaushik, Raj Kumar Sangwan, and Vikas Krishan Yadav have trained—has a reputation for excellence.</p><p>So, in 2023, when Mahendra Ghanghas took his daughter Priya to the said academy, he tried to hype her up. Although she had been training for a few years at that point, she had little to show for it. She hadn’t even won a title at the district level. Nevertheless, Mahendra tried to convince the coaches there that she was a talent waiting to be discovered.</p><p>“He was telling me that Priya was really talented. When I first saw her, I wasn’t so sure. She didn’t have any real results. And which parent doesn’t think their child isn’t special?” recalls Mahavir Singh, a two-decade-long veteran with the Indian national team.</p><p>He eventually took the 16-year-old under his wings anyway.</p><p>Few doubt just how special Priya is now.</p><div class=" article-picture center"><img src="https://ss-i.thgim.com/public/boxing/sjrr09/article70837644.ece/alternates/FREE_1200/Priya%20Ghanghas%20with%20brother%20Neeraj%20Father%20Mahavir%20and%20mother2%201.jpeg" data-original="https://ss-i.thgim.com/public/boxing/sjrr09/article70837644.ece/alternates/FREE_1200/Priya%20Ghanghas%20with%20brother%20Neeraj%20Father%20Mahavir%20and%20mother2%201.jpeg" alt="From left to right: Neeraj Ghanghas, his sister Priya, father Mahendra, and mother." title="From left to right: Neeraj Ghanghas, his sister Priya, father Mahendra, and mother." class=" lazy" width="100%" height="100%"/><div class="pic-caption"><figcaption class="figure-caption align-text-bottom"><p> From left to right: Neeraj Ghanghas, his sister Priya, father Mahendra, and mother. | Photo Credit: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT </p><img class="caption-image" src="https://assetsss.thehindu.com/theme/images/SSRX/lightbox-info.svg" alt="lightbox-info"/></figcaption></div><p class="caption"> From left to right: Neeraj Ghanghas, his sister Priya, father Mahendra, and mother. | Photo Credit: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT </p></div><p>As the youngest boxer in the Indian squad and in what is her senior international debut, Priya has been one of the standout performers at the Asian Boxing Championships in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. Having already beaten former world champion Chengyu Yang of China in the quarterfinals, Priya will take on North Korea’s Won Un Gyong in the final of the women’s 60kg category.</p><p>At first it was just Priya’s father who believed in his daughter’s ability. He’d been an enthusiastic kabaddi player but had been forced by his family to give up the sport and earn a living. “In my time, no one in my family encouraged me to be a sportsperson. So when I became a father, I knew I wanted my children to become sportspersons,” he says.</p><p>Boxing seemed like a good choice. “When Priya was only three years old, Vijender Singh won an Olympic bronze (at the 2008 Beijing Olympics). He is from Kaluwas, which is only about 20 kilometers from our village of Dhanana. There was a big craze surrounding the sport in the region then. So I wanted my children to be boxers and win a medal at the Olympics also,” he says.</p><h4 class="sub_head">It runs in the family</h4><p>Priya wasn’t the first in her family to pursue the sport. Dhanana, in fact, has a reputation of producing women’s boxers. Two, Sakshi Ghanghas and her cousin Nitu Ghanghas, have won titles at the World Championships.</p><p>It wasn’t clear whether Priya was going to follow in the footsteps of her seniors, though. She and her brother Neeraj Ghanghas, who is a year older, started boxing in 2016. They were initially training at an academy in Charkhi Dadri—incidentally, where shooting Olympic medallist, Manu Bhaker had also taken a few classes.</p><p>But while Priya trained diligently, she didn’t get the kind of results she would have wanted. “She took part in district-level competitions, but she didn’t win over there. I suspected the judges weren’t treating her fairly,” says Mahendra.</p><p>That’s when he decided to shift his two children to Bhiwani. It wasn’t an easy choice. “Priya was also very good in studies. She scored 90 per cent in her class 12 board exams. So, she could have chosen to follow any line, but she wanted to make boxing her focus,” says Mahendra.</p><p><b>READ: <a href="https://sportstar.thehindu.com/boxing/asian-boxing-championships-2026-india-results-semifinals-highlights-womens-mens-competition/article70834795.ece#google_vignette" target="_blank">Asian Boxing Championships 2026: Eight Indians in gold-medal bouts</a></b></p><p>Although coach Mahavir says there wasn’t anything that initially stood out about Priya, he soon realised her strengths. “Boxing isn’t purely a physical game. So, even if you have one or two excellent qualities and are average in others, you can still become a good boxer. Priya had some technical weaknesses early on. She often dropped her hands when punching, so we had to train her to stop doing that. But she also was genetically very strong, had a lot of tactical understanding of the sport, and had very good motor qualities,” he says.</p><p>Most of all, though, Mahavir says Priya surprised him with her stubbornness. “ <i>Badi diler boxer hai</i> (She is a very courageous boxer). Her willpower is very strong. She refuses to accept defeat. She keeps pushing herself. A lot of boxers are talented but make excuses. I don’t recall a single day that she hasn’t showed up to train. I’ve made her spar against boys and boxers who are far heavier than her, and she never steps back,” he says.</p><p>It wasn’t just Priya who had an adamant streak. So did her father. Although he ran a stone-crushing business in Dadri, he bought a house in Bhiwani and shifted with his family there. “I go to my business one or two days a week at most. Right now my priority is Priya. I take her to the academy and bring her back. When she travels for competitions, I always go with her. When we moved to Bhiwani, I bought a cow and a buffalo so that there’s enough milk for my children. My wife also makes sure that almonds are ground so that Priya gets the right nutrition. All these cost money, but <i>mere mein bhi junoon hai</i> (Even I have my passion). I have to make sure that Priya doesn’t lack anything,” he says.</p><h4 class="sub_head">The hex comes undone</h4><p>Within a year of joining Bhiwani’s Boxing Academy, Priya’s luck began to change. She won the district and then State youth title in 2023, before following it up with the national title. After repeating the same wins the next year, she competed at the Asian Youth Championships, where she won silver. Her career graph has only gone one way since then.</p><div class="verticle article-picture center"><img src="https://ss-i.thgim.com/public/boxing/g6v3bj/article70837654.ece/alternates/FREE_1200/Priya%20Ghanghas%20with%20her%20brother.jpeg" data-original="https://ss-i.thgim.com/public/boxing/g6v3bj/article70837654.ece/alternates/FREE_1200/Priya%20Ghanghas%20with%20her%20brother.jpeg" alt="There’s always good-natured teasing between Neeraj and Priya." title="There’s always good-natured teasing between Neeraj and Priya." class=" lazy" width="100%" height="100%"/><div class="pic-caption"><figcaption class="figure-caption align-text-bottom"><p> There’s always good-natured teasing between Neeraj and Priya. | Photo Credit: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT </p><img class="caption-image" src="https://assetsss.thehindu.com/theme/images/SSRX/lightbox-info.svg" alt="lightbox-info"/></figcaption></div><p class="caption"> There’s always good-natured teasing between Neeraj and Priya. | Photo Credit: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT </p></div><p>Incidentally, her record has mirrored that of her elder brother Neeraj, who has also won a national youth title and a silver medal at the Asian Youth Championships. This often leads to some good-natured teasing between the two. “They’ll compare each other’s results. One of them will say, ‘I’ve won this medal, when are you going to win this?’” says Mahendra.</p><p>This year, though, Priya has started making far bigger strides. She competed at her first senior national championships in Noida, where she took silver behind world champion Jaismine Lamboria. She might have fallen short of the title there, but she’s hoping to make up for it at the Asian Championships.</p><p>Her path, though, won’t be easy—considering her opponent had got the better of Olympic champion Lin Yu Ting in the semifinal. For her part, Priya is upbeat. “I spoke to her before the final, and she was very confident. She said <i>koi dikkat nahi hai</i> (there’s no problem),” says Mahendra.</p><div class="article-picture left-img verticle"><img src="https://ss-i.thgim.com/public/boxing/lurn23/article70837651.ece/alternates/FREE_1200/priya%20ghanghas%20coach%20mahender%20Singh.jpeg" data-original="https://ss-i.thgim.com/public/boxing/lurn23/article70837651.ece/alternates/FREE_1200/priya%20ghanghas%20coach%20mahender%20Singh.jpeg" alt="Priya and her coach Mahavir." title="Priya and her coach Mahavir." class=" lazy" width="100%" height="100%"/><div class="pic-caption"><figcaption class="figure-caption align-text-bottom"><p> Priya and her coach Mahavir. | Photo Credit: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT </p><img class="caption-image" src="https://assetsss.thehindu.com/theme/images/SSRX/lightbox-info.svg" alt="lightbox-info"/></figcaption></div><p class="caption"> Priya and her coach Mahavir. | Photo Credit: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT </p></div><p>And although reaching a continental final in her first appearance is a significant achievement, Mahendra says her best is yet to come.</p><p>According to the Boxing Federation of India’s selection process, boxers who reach the finals at the Asian Boxing Championships 2026 secure direct qualification for the Commonwealth Games and Asian Games. “You look out for her after that also. She is a special talent,” he says.</p><p class="publish-time" id="end-of-article">Published on Apr 08, 2026</p></div> #slow #career #start #Priya #Ghanghas #prepares #big #step #Asian #Championships #final

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