When Christian Louboutin announced Jaden Smith as the maison’s first men’s creative director, the fashion world did not know what to expect. The appointment came with more questions than answers. Why Jaden? Why now? Was this another celebrity playing designer?
It has been nine months since that announcement. And on June 3, 2026, the answer arrived in stores worldwide. The Fall/Winter 2026 collection is not what anyone expected. It is also not a joke.
Jaden Smith is all in for this role, and somehow, it all works.

The Man Behind the Red Sole
Smith’s appointment was announced in September 2025, positioning him as the first men’s creative director in the maison’s history. His responsibilities: four annual collections across men’s shoes, leather goods, and accessories, plus campaigns, events, and immersive experiences.
The skepticism was predictable. Smith, now 27, has spent years being dismissed as fashion’s eccentric wildcard. He wore a Batman costume to his own album signing. He showed up to the Grammys carrying his own severed head. He has been called a spectacle.
But those who expected him to treat Louboutin as a hobby misread the moment entirely. The debut collection suggests something else: a young man who has been paying attention, who understands craftsmanship, and who is not afraid to ask uncomfortable questions.
His own summary of the collection is characteristically cosmic: “Inspired by the history of working men throughout the centuries. The stone masons, the scribes, the doctors. It’s inspired by the lost epochs of time and made by hands born from stars, forged under immense pressure deep in cosmic space”.
That sounds like nonsense. But the shoes are anything but.
The Shoes
The collection is anchored in leather craftsmanship, not sneakers. Smith made a point of honoring what Louboutin built. “His brand is really about handmade leather craftsmanship, and I wanted to honor that”.

The hero piece is the Molten Trapman boot. It is engineered to look like it is dripping in glossy, red molten paint, creating a tactile contrast against its matte base. It is the kind of shoe that makes you pause on the street. It is also the kind of shoe only certain people can wear. But Smith does not seem bothered by that.
The Trapman TCT 2 draws from 1990s hip-hop, a formative era for Smith. He described it as “creating the formal attire for the men of the future”. The Plato Dots loafer features laser-cut openings across the upper. “These holes allow the customer to truly express themselves because you can change the look of the entire shoe by the socks that you wear with them,” Smith told WWD.
Then there are the flip-flops. Of all the shoes in the collection, Smith is most excited about the thong sandals. “Honestly, some of my favorite shoes are these flip-flops,” he said, changing into a pair during an interview. “You can just wear them with pants like this and just have an easy look”.
He imagines people on a rocky beach, falling in love, wearing Louboutin flip-flops. It is an unlikely image, but it is also disarmingly genuine.
The collection also includes the Corteo evening shoe, a formal lace-up first introduced in 2019, now updated with a cushioned insole typically found in sneakers. The Asclepius Sling reimagines a sculptural silhouette as a sling-back. The Tactical Skate low-top offers clean lines and an expanded color palette.

The Campaign
The visual campaign was shot inside a 17th-century French château near Paris. This location was not accidental. “The château is supposed to represent the maison of Christian Louboutin and a look at the world that we’re building,” Smith explained.
The imagery features four generations of men, all dressed in the collection. “The campaign represents the Christian Louboutin man, through the lens of different generations living together within the same universe, each bringing their own perspective, energy, and way of expressing themselves”.
The aesthetic blends aristocratic grandeur with youthful energy. Analog-inspired textures, cinematic lighting, and blurred compositions create a world suspended between memory and reality. The historic château has geometric gardens, weathered textures, and antique elements. The result is timeless and feels distinctly like Smith.
Rather than hiding imperfections, the campaign embraces them. “The château we chose is the Maison’s home, where these generations of working men come together: a place where heritage and individuality coexist naturally”.
The Exhibition
Before the collection hit stores, Smith unveiled it through an immersive exhibition in Paris during Men’s Fashion Week in January. No traditional runway show. Instead, guests walked through a series of installations: a black-and-white film inspired by pioneers of early moving images, a stack of vintage TVs showing footage from Smith’s LA studio, a room where shoes sat on plinths inside a giant red exploding head.
It was spooky, slightly Lynchian, and entirely intentional.
The exhibition was shaped by photography and cinema, two mediums central to Smith’s creative language and deeply connected to France, where many of their earliest developments took place. He drew on 19th-century experiments with light and movement by pioneers like Niépce, Daguerre, and the Lumière brothers.
“This collection is inspired by the history of working men throughout the centuries,” Smith said at the exhibition. “The stone masons, the scribes, the doctors. It’s inspired by the lost epochs of time and made by hands born from stars, forged under immense pressure deep in cosmic space”.
At the center of the exhibition was a monumental exploded red head serving as an immersive display for the collection. An angel sculpture from Louboutin’s own collection appeared as a guardian figure, representing their creative bond.
The Bags and Beyond
The collection extends beyond footwear. There is a comprehensive range of bags, small leather goods, jewelry, eyewear, and accessories. The Tactical Multi-Pocket tote and Tactical Harness complete a head-to-toe silhouette. The Canopy line introduces streamlined leather goods, including a passport holder, belt, and cap.
Smith’s design philosophy, as he explained it, draws from quantum physics. “Quantum physics and mechanics, like the dead cat experiment where we don’t know what’s going on in spaces that we can’t see into,” he said. “But we do know that atoms and very small molecules change when they’re being observed. And that idea is the basis of a lot of my design philosophy.
That is either profound or pretentious. It might be both. The shoes, though, speak for themselves.
What Christian Louboutin Saw
Christian Louboutin did not conduct a formal search for a men’s creative director. The appointment was an organic result of a friendship that began when the two met in 2019. Louboutin has said he sees a strong creative kinship with Smith, noting they share a similar mentality, enthusiasm, and a playful approach to style.
“He’s my main inspiration,” Smith said. “I really just want to learn from him and take the past of Christian Louboutin to create the future of what Louboutin could be”.
Smith has learned. He pointed to Louboutin’s love of history. “Christian is always pulling inspiration from history and from amazing art. So that’s my big thing now, too: pulling things from history and using an art piece to put on the shoes as a print”.
From a business perspective, the men’s line represents about 24 percent of Louboutin’s revenue. The company’s CEO has expressed a belief that Smith can help ignite growth in this category. The appointment, in other words, is not just symbolic.
The Bottom Line

The collection arrived in stores on June 3, 2026. Smith will host a series of launch events throughout June in New York, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Paris, and London. The shoes are available now. They are expensive. They are also genuinely interesting.
What makes this collection notable is not that Jaden Smith designed shoes. It is that he designed shoes worth discussing. The molten boots. The perforated loafers. The flip-flops he genuinely loves. The exhibition in Paris. The campaign in a 17th-century château.
Jaden Smith’s debut as creative director of Christian Louboutin could have been a gimmick but it is clearly not.
It is messy and ambitious as he is trying to say something. And in an era where menswear is often reduced to quiet luxury and algorithmic recommendations, that alone feels like a small rebellion.





