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NIHL Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

NIHL Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

“They’re these sort of very generic pieces that have been fucked in a very gentle way,” Neil Grotzinger said of their spring collection, which they presented as an extension of the ideas they explored last season, of reconsidering the formality and the way most clothes can be, or are, generic products. “It’s this feeling of things that are very, very high and very, very low, blended together.”

This time around, Grotzinger focused on what they do best: ornamenting and reinventing. This is a designer whose technical eye is ingenious and robust, but most impressive this season was the way Grotzinger embellished a lineup of T-shirts and shirts upcycled into precious items covered in hot-fix crystals, each applied by hand. There were teddy bears and stilettos and even little shimmering trinkets hanging from each piece. They were cute and fun and covetable. They were simple, too, as cute T-shirts are; but they had been intervened to become opulent, almost formal styles.

“I think that’s becoming such a token of my personal style,” Grotzinger said of the new formality they’d been considering for the season—embellishments, tailoring, and such—which two entire generations, including both theirs and that of their students at the Parsons School of Design, have made their own by taking it out of context. “It’s being chaotic, not giving a shit, but still putting themselves together in a way that’s like, ‘if I have to be at an occasion or event, I’m going to be antagonistic in some way.’”

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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Staud Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Staud Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

Sarah Staudinger’s spring 2026 collection was a full-fledged love letter to California. Earlier this year, Staudinger lost her childhood home during the wildfires. As a California born and bred brand, she wanted her spring 2026 collection to be a celebration of everything she loves about the Golden State. “It was very much an homage to California through the aftermath of the fire,” she said. “I grew up on the Pacific coastline, and even though it was devastating that we lost all these houses and I lost my home and everything, there was this amazing sense of energy that embodies the California lifestyle. In retrospect there was so much joy and this collection was so easy to create because it was so personal to all of us at Staud and allowed us to honor our home.”

Some of the joys include surfing, Staudinger being a huge surfer and beach lover herself. There were surf-inspired pieces including long board shorts, except Staudinger’s were fashionable and trimmed with lace or came in some fun stripes. Crop tops looked like rash guards and were adorned with a cute shark embellishment, and new bags include leather surfboard clutches. A key point, the designer pointed out, is that the bag has real surf fins on the back: she wasn’t playing around on the details.

However, the most valuable aspect of this collection was that the pieces felt both nostalgic and fresh. Many pieces you could envision on a Marissa Cooper or Summer Roberts if The O.C. were set in today’s world, including the yellow terry cloth après-beach coverup, and the sultry beaded gold shirt that would look great with a pair of Staud’s new jeans.

Some standouts of the collection included a silk palm tree printed dress and coat. Against an orange and green backdrop that faded into a dark navy was a picturesque palm tree skyline, an indicator that even after the fires, California’s beauty will always remain.

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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6397 Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

6397 Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 September 17, 2025
written by jummy84

“It just continues,” offered the 6397 designer Lizzie Owens this morning at the brand’s showroom. “It’s what 6397 is, it’s all about real clothes, but they still have something compelling to them. It’s familiar, but it’s also new.”

Most labels, in New York or elsewhere, that offer the kinds of clothes that 6397 does—contemporary, wearable, pragmatic—swear by a similar ethos. But at 6397 it happens to be true. An all-American heather gray knit had a silver tint to it; the stripes in the knitted vests and dresses were slightly askew, and blazers were finished with gathered, almost bubble hems. Poplin shirting wasn’t reserved for button downs only, but appeared fashioned into a style reminiscent of a hoodie. Kilts and skirts were not constrictive and “body-con,” but both square-ish and flattering, and almost gender-agnostic. 

Owens said this season the 6397 team looked at “some older, demure ideas from the mid-century.” These included roomy dresses whose shapes were reminiscent of couture gowns of yore, had they been invertebrates (meaning, no boning, corseting, or such constrictions), plus bateau necklines, and even pedal-pusher-length bottoms, which Owens said she’s referring as beyond shorts. “Even a few of these names feel… old,” she said, before remarking with a laugh that in cities like New York “we are still pushing pedals, but on Citi Bikes.” 

She’s right, and she was also right in rendering said beyond shorts in knits with snaps down each exterior side seam. She was right in cutting dresses as if they were boxy tees, and in applying the bateau neckline in question to said dresses or poplin shirts, making them unprecedentedly cool. The most on-the-money she was this season, however, was in how she kept referring to these concoctions: “summer solutions.” Nothing old or demure about those. 

September 17, 2025 0 comments
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Palomo Spain Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear
Fashion

Palomo Spain Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear

by jummy84 September 17, 2025
written by jummy84

Palomo Spain Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear

September 17, 2025 0 comments
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Bevza Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Bevza Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 September 17, 2025
written by jummy84

Svitlana Bevza, the Ukrainian designer of the label Bevza, had the work of early 20th century artist Kazimir Malevich on her mind. Malevich was revered for his avant garde abstract art focusing on the purity of the square, before in later years turning to more figurative abstractions, like his 1932 painting of young women in a wheat field. (Contrary to popular belief, or indeed my college art history classes, Malevich was a Kyiv-born Ukrainian—not Russian.) Bevza is certainly a bit of an abstract figurist herself, and her work draws on the purity of the same line and shape, and none more so than her chic, meditative, graphically linear Spring 2026 collection. It was shown at a sun-filled industrial building in West Chelsea, the starkness of her palette of whites and blacks contrasting with searing carrot red, deep navy and the softest, butteriest yellow.

“Malevich was a father of modernism,” said Bevza. “He utilized the square, and that’s where I started with when cutting this collection. It’s a very stable shape, but it doesn’t look aggressive on the body because it’s the wearer and their personality who shapes any fabric.” She certainly manipulated her crepes, bamboo jerseys, and dense cottons well. There was an inventive and accomplished zippered square top/skirt (it can be worn either way, and is a rare example of so many designers’ obsession this NYFW with placing square flat volumes on a woman’s body—and it actually working); fluid jersey dresses with such rigor to the control of the fabric (as good as Hussein Chalayan’s from back in the day, and I absolutely mean that as a huge compliment); and geometric-collared shirts worn with long cuboid-panniered skirts.

Of course, that span of Malevich’s art—the futurism of geometry to the very cerebral sentimentality of his latter work—is also indicative of the bigger picture of Bevza’s life, which she has, because of the war on Ukraine, being living in London since 2023 with her children and also more recently her husband, and you could feel that arc in this collection. It had the idea of the power of creating, and the connection one feels to the landscape of one’s homeland.

The wheatsheaf has long been associated with Ukraine, and Bevza’s jewelry has used it as a leitmotif, adopted as a symbol by the Ukrainian diaspora as a mark of solidarity and remembrance. This season, Bevza coated it in white as a single strand necklace, or more showily, as a face mask. She can tell you in the most humbling terms about the challenges of her team in Ukraine continuing to work and create and commune together, and by extension, how making fashion can be an exercise in dignity and defiance. So much so that she will open her first ever store in Kyiv later this year. For any designer working for nearly 20 years, that’s a landmark moment, but for Bevza and her team, who are going through unimaginable daily challenges, it’s nothing less than an absolute triumph.

September 17, 2025 0 comments
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LaQuan Smith Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear
Fashion

LaQuan Smith Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear

by jummy84 September 17, 2025
written by jummy84

LaQuan Smith Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear

September 17, 2025 0 comments
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Lii Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear
Fashion

Lii Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Lii Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear

September 16, 2025 0 comments
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Snow Xue Gao Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Snow Xue Gao Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

As a business owner with a storefront on Bowery, designer Snow Xue Gao gets the pleasure of seeing what young, everyday women are wearing. These days, she says those early 20-somethings are dressing corporate but casual, styling business-on-top blazers with casual bottoms. She finds that slip skirts and cotton tiered maxi skirts are some favorites of these Gen Z women, and incorporated that logic into her collection.

She’s been perfecting her tweed blazers for a while now, and this season, most will come just shy of $300 in different colorways, from pink to black. Due to the popularity of this piece, she’s even explored a new “puffer” option, tweed on the outside with a thin layer of puffer material on the inside for those early spring days. Gao also mentioned that on her lunch break she often visits Elizabeth Street Garden and notices girls wearing clothing that is still loose but stylish, and she wanted to ensure that her collection matched the needs of those very women. Talk about a great way of doing market research.

September 16, 2025 0 comments
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Bibhu Mohapatra Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Bibhu Mohapatra Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Before last year, Bibhu Mohapatra would normally zero in on a muse for the season, and have them inspire his collections—not a facsimile of their personal style or aesthetics, but his interpretation of the subject’s essence. But for the last two seasons, after he returned to India to perform funerary rites for his parents and brother, Mohapatra’s offerings have centered on grief and loss.

Now, the designer is combining the concept of a muse and his Indian heritage to pave a new way forward. After bringing pieces from his last collection to India, Mohapatra decided to shoot a campaign at various landmarks in Mumbai—the Gateway of India and the Queen’s Necklace among them. He left feeling galvanized by the twentysomethings who made up his crew. “I was blown away by what we created,” he said. “They’re putting in 200%.” Around that same time, he was heartened by a June 2025 ruling in the Andhra Pradesh High Court that declared trans women legally women. “The broadening of the definition of women forced me to look at my culture with a different lens and how this is reflected in today’s world,” he said.

Thus, Mohapatra decided that he wanted his spring 2026 collection to appeal to a new generation, while still honoring trailblazing Indian women of the 20th century. “I am basically channeling the spirits of those women and building a bridge to the 21st century,” he said.

The collection did look younger than in previous seasons. The pastel pink satin crepe cargo pants underneath a more traditional red kurta were a particular highlight, as were the cargo jeans paired with a white, rhinestone-encrusted crop top. But the array of opulent evening gowns seemed unlikely appeal to a younger demographic.

It was nice to see Mohapatra embrace vibrant colors this season. The bold chartreuse was reminiscent of last year’s Brat Summer, while the pale pink and red combination felt playful. “I wanted this collection to be about hope, optimism, and a celebration of the people of India,” he said. “I wanted to make it happy.”

September 16, 2025 0 comments
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Toteme Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear
Fashion

Toteme Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear

by jummy84 September 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Toteme Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear

September 15, 2025 0 comments
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