It might seem like a typical Parisian cafe scene. Empty escargot shells blanketed with a buttery sheen. Utensils askew. cigarette butts on coffee saucers.
But as patrons light even more cigarettes and sip at glasses of beer, the crowd around them swells — more and more with every passing minute. Photographers click away at their cameras, pointing their monstrously long lenses toward the streetfront. What’s there? I get on my tiptoes to catch a glimpse of the truck sitting directly in front of the Café de la Mairie — a well-loved, as Parisian-as-it-gets corner brasserie in the 6th arrondissement of Paris. This is the concept that Paula Canovas del Vas devised for her spring-summer 2026 presentation at Paris Fashion Week.
“We decided that we had to do something that felt mobile, that we could shoot in different spots around the city,” the designer told Vogue before the presentation. “So that part’s very public. But then we thought, ‘What can we do that’s the opposite of public? How can we create a juxtaposition with an intimate space?’” So, she decided to transform a dropside truck into a bathroom — the most private of all domestic spaces where people are trained not to pry — and park it in front of a sidewalk cafe, where, y’know, people-watching is considered de rigueur.