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Shushu/Tong Shanghai Fall 2026 Collection
Fashion

Shushu/Tong Shanghai Fall 2026 Collection

by jummy84 April 3, 2026
written by jummy84

Liushu Lei and Yutong Jiang had the vibiest show of Shanghai Fashion Week this season thanks in large part to the thrilled sorority of Shushu/Tong girls that flocked to the Labelhood venue to see it. The core appeal of the brand seemed to be epitomized in Lei’s explanation as to why they’d called this collection The Invented Self: “She’s the kind of girl who has her own character outside of the family.”

Lei and Jiang’s collection was specifically inspired by Violette Nozière, the 1978 Claude Chabrol true-crime art house movie starring Isabelle Huppert as a 1930s teenager forced into a fatal revolt against her overbearing and abusive family. The designers took a panoply of 1930s and 1940s shapes and then applied a hyper-stylized and ultra-feminine filter that was most often expressed through the ceremonially crooked right elbow from, which in almost every look, a house handbag was hung.

Shrunken opaque cardigans, plaid pencil skirts, stirruped knee socks, ruffle edged gowns in crushed velvet that draped off the body like theater curtains framing a stage, peter pan collared swing coats, and cutely cut shift dresses were amongst the many ladylike brushstrokes with which Lei and Jang constructed the image of their heroine. As so often here in Shanghai this week, there were drop-waisted dresses and skirts as well as bows aplenty.

Although the audience was absolute proof of the appeal of these borderline costume full-look ensembles (the collection was designed to enable personal reinvention, after all), it was the outfits less reliant on both period and drama that seemed most potentially individual. Look 17’s ruffle-seamed track-skirt-suit in washed lemon nylon and the excellent quarter-zip, drop waisted, pleat skirted dresses in a deeply colored dense cotton mix in looks 2 and 29 were the highlights of this category. That track top, with shorts this time, was also shown in baby blue on a male model: it was one of several looks in which Lei and Jiang’s womenswear was given a pretty persuasive test drive on men.

April 3, 2026 0 comments
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New US Trailer for Wong Kar Wai's 'Blossoms Shanghai' Criterion Debut
Hollywood

New US Trailer for Wong Kar Wai’s ‘Blossoms Shanghai’ Criterion Debut

by jummy84 November 4, 2025
written by jummy84

New US Trailer for Wong Kar Wai’s ‘Blossoms Shanghai’ Criterion Debut

by Alex Billington
November 3, 2025
Source: Criterion

“No one can stop him!” Criterion Channel has unveiled a brand new US trailer for the long-awaited release of the latest Wong Kar-Wai project – a streaming series called Blossoms Shanghai. Some may remember we posted trailers for this back in 2021 and 2022 before it debuted in China in 2023. It has taken the last two years for them to figure out how to get this streaming in the US as well, now it’ll finally be available to watch in November this fall. The series features a grand total of 30 episodes! Also known as only Blossoms (繁花) for China. This is an adaptation of a 2012 novel of the same name from Jin Yucheng, telling the story of a young entrepreneur named Mr. Bao as he seeks wealth, status and romance set against a backdrop of China’s 1990s economic boom. The story of a “self-made millionaire” in Shanghai during the 1990s, a young opportunist with a troubled past. Wong has said it is a “deeply personal venture as a return to his hometown of Shanghai,” and he has been working on its script and development for five years.” Starring Hu Ge as Mr. Bao, with Kris Wu, Ma Yili, Tang Yan, & Xin Zhilei. WKW also adds: “The series captures the vitality of Shanghai’s roaring ’90s, revealing universal human truths about desire and destiny.” Take a new look below.

Here’s the official Criterion Channel trailer for Wong Kar-Wai’s series Blossoms Shanghai, from them:

“I am thrilled to continue my long-standing relationship with Criterion with the North American debut of my first series on the Criterion Channel. The series captures the vitality of Shanghai’s roaring ’90s, revealing universal human truths about desire and destiny. We hope the series provides insight into the pivotal moment of China’s reinvention.” –Director Wong Kar-Wai

Blossoms Shanghai Series

Blossoms Shanghai Series

Blossoms Shanghai Series

You can rewatch the first trailer for Wong Kar-Wai’s Blossoms Shanghai here to view even more footage.

Blossoms Shanghai tells the story of an enigmatic, self-made millionaire, known as Mr. Bao (Hu Ge), and his journey of reinvention from a young opportunist with a troubled past to the heights of the gilded city of Shanghai. Set against the backdrop of massive economic growth in 1990’s Shanghai, the series unveils the glamour that follows his dazzling wealth and his entanglement with four fabulous women that represent the pursuits of his life: adventure, honor, love and innocence. Blossoms Shanghai, otherwise known as just Blossoms, includes both a web series and a feature film directed by beloved Chinese filmmaker Wong Kar-Wai, director of many great films including As Tears Go By, Days of Being Wild, Chungking Express, Ashes of Time, Fallen Angels, Happy Together, In the Mood for Love, 2046, My Blueberry Nights, and also The Grandmaster previously, as well as a few shorts and other projects. The screenplay is also written by Wong Kar-Wai, adapted from the novel of the same name written by Jin Yucheng. It’s also produced by Wong Kar-Wai, with Peter Pau as the Visual Supervisor. This first debuted in China back in 2023. Criterion Channel begins streaming WKW’s Blossoms Shanghai starting November 24th, 2025. More info on their website.

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Find more posts in: Foreign Films, Streaming, To Watch, Trailer

November 4, 2025 0 comments
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Shushu/Tong Shanghai Spring 2026 Collection
Fashion

Shushu/Tong Shanghai Spring 2026 Collection

by jummy84 October 21, 2025
written by jummy84

“What is left after beauty decays?” That was the fascinating prompt from designers Liushu “Shushu” Lei and Yutong “Tong Tong” Jiang, who’ve built an aesthetically concise and tightly packaged world at Shushu/Tong, a brand is synonymous with a certain kind of prettiness—prim, sophisticated, put together. 

This season, they appeared eager to challenge those ideals, and the exercise made for a compelling collection that was satisfying and at times even surprising. After the show, Shushu said that the duo had pushed themselves to explore different fabrications and materials. Ten years in, the pair have a robust body of work—there’s no better time to play around. 

Not coincidentally, this Shanghai Fashion Week was full of milestone anniversaries. Labelhood, the retail-cum-incubator that has helped establish labels like Shushu/Tong, celebrated its 20th season, and Samuel Guì Yang also marked a decade in business. The city’s fashion industry is still young, but some of its defining talents are formidable, and Shushu/Tong is one of its more influential. Their peers often pick up on their cues—a little flared dress, a painstakingly embellished blazer, the power of a well-placed logo. So this season, Lei and Jiang turned their signatures upside down.

What in the past would have been peplums in wool crepe or suiting fabric became layers and layers of light cotton, dyed to appear as if aged. The most body-hugging silhouettes came cut in leather (a tailored cocktail dress, a paneled skirt), while lace dresses were worn over contrasting underwear. Sheaths, cut looser than usual, were styled over colorful brassieres or on top of cropped knit sweaters. The whole thing was cooler and more nuanced.

October 21, 2025 0 comments
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Xu Zhi Shanghai Spring 2026 Collection
Fashion

Xu Zhi Shanghai Spring 2026 Collection

by jummy84 October 21, 2025
written by jummy84

Xuzhi Chen is Shanghai’s resident boho spokesman. At first glance, his spring 2026 collection—his second since his big return to the Shanghai Fashion Week fold last season—looked as if it were engineered to accompany the fashion dictionary’s entry on boho-chic, checking every box with its wispy dresses, ballooning pantaloons, and diaphanous silk blouses. But as he explained in the lead up to the show, Chen was getting at something deeper and more romantic. 

He cited the French poet Arthur Rimbaud as an inspiration, but rather than focus on his volatile early years and his torrid affair with Paul Verlaine he was thinking about his later days. After spending his youth in the arts, leading a precarious, vagabond-like life with Verlaine, Rimbaud left his career as a writer and began travelling extensively. He traversed Europe, mostly on foot, and became a soldier to explore Indonesia, then the Dutch East Indies, eventually settling in Yemen. On his runway, Chen considered what Rimbaud might have found during his travels.

To his credit, rather than a melange of disparate elements, what Chen conjured was a sense of wanderlust. On the womenswear front, he offered some nice dresses and embellished both blouses and dresses with cascades of ruffles, which he paired with either trousers—jeans or tailored, the former not always successfully—and flouncy skirts. His boho vision was most clearly realized in his menswear: three-piece suits were cut amply but not oversized in pretty silk brocades and styled either shirtless or with blouses and, here and there, a pantaloon—and always accessorized with sandals. Super short-shorts helped add sharpness to the softness of other looks, and amped up the sex appeal of the collection overall. There was an air of idiosyncrasy to his men’s looks that the designer should leverage across his full collection. The story Chen told felt as if Rimbaud had taken up traveling not to move on from his writing, but to document it as a poet.

October 21, 2025 0 comments
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Markgong Shanghai Spring 2026 Collection
Fashion

Markgong Shanghai Spring 2026 Collection

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

Chalk it up to Bella Hadid’s widely-documented cowboy era or to the influence of Vogue cover-certified horse girls Gigi Hadid and Kendall Jenner, but something about stomping around in some leather fringe and cowboy boots has conquered the hearts of fashion-minded twenty-somethings.

At face value, Mark Gong’s spring collection suggests that he’s clocked the trend. But actually, Gong was a pioneer. It was in 2019 that he first riffed on the cowgirl theme, and this season he gave it a do-over. “I was chatting with my friends and said I would like to re-do it” he said. The impetus was a movie night featuring the 1991 Ridley Scott film Thelma and Louise. 

“I know it’s not a movie about cowboys,” Gong said, explaining that he was attracted to the rebellious, freewheeling energy of its main characters, two defining traits of who he calls his “Gong Girls.” It also inspired him, he said, to look at the American West with a more feminine point of view, rather than from the male gaze with which he designed that first connection.

He mostly pulled it off, with the exception of the funny but mostly just gratuitous rearview mirror and police siren bra tops—which were actually designed in collaboration with the women-led jewelry design studio Yvumin. Other models carried gas pumps and wore outlandishly long thigh-high boots with their fringed and ruffled clothes.

Some of the fun leather pencil skirts and bandeau tops he made were embossed or embroidered with tooling motifs, which reappeared on his power tailoring and low stacked heel boots (“young women are less interested in high heels!”). He also showed t-shirts and jeans and cargo pants, and unveiled an extension of his ongoing Nike collab. Together it made for a covetable, commercial collection, delectably packaged as an entertaining story. All in all, Gong is proving to be one of Shanghai’s most proficient designer-merchants. 

October 17, 2025 0 comments
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8ON8 Shanghai Spring 2026 Collection
Fashion

8ON8 Shanghai Spring 2026 Collection

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Li Gong has picked up running. He’s not alone; in fact, he is joining an entire generational cohort—that Millennial-to-Gen Z bridge of late 20- and early 30-somethings—that seems to have converted to fitness since the pandemic. At least according to the Internet, that is, with all the running clubs and running influencers taking over this very stationary writer’s feed.

A London Fashion Week mainstay since 2019, Gong brought his collection to Shanghai this season. He explained that he felt like coming home to China to commemorate his eighth anniversary. As you may have caught on by now, the number 8, a perfect closed loop, is a bit of a theme for this designer. Does that mean that he only jogs in infinity-shaped routes?

It’s what his models did at his show; some of them running around his 8-shaped runway and others simply appearing like they did. This he achieved by either adding horsehair to the bottom of running shorts—which took them from bottom-drawer staples to hero wardrobe pieces—or by lining suit jackets with swishy technical windbreakers and styling the tailored part open and draped over the shoulders. Elsewhere, Gong was equally clever with more standardized wardrobe classics: button-downs received that same hem treatment and other separates were heat pressed and then printed, creating a cool crackled look.

This is the kind of futuristic technicality that Gong has become known for in China, has it’s helped him build a robust business with an enviable portfolio of collaborations: Japanese Asics sneakers since 2020, Italian Canali tailoring in 2021, and even the all-American Gap, via a capsule collection for the Asia-Pacific region in 2023. What really defines 8on8, though, is a kind of eclectic retro-athleticism that is equal parts nostalgic and forward-looking.

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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Samuel Guì Yang Shanghai Spring 2026 Collection
Fashion

Samuel Guì Yang Shanghai Spring 2026 Collection

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Founded by Samuel Guidong Yang in London in 2015, Samuel Guì Yang is today one of China’s most prominent fashion exports. Yang himself is also something of a hometown hero with a thoughtful East-meets-West aesthetic that has come to define New Chinese Style. Since 2017 Yang has been designing the collection alongside his partner and co-founder Erik Litzén. This season, they celebrated the label’s 10th anniversary with a show at the Rockbund Art Museum, a beautiful example of Shanghai’s unique blend of eastern and western architecture that has sat at the intersection of the Huangpu River and the Suzhou Creek since 1932.

“It felt nice to be able to be nostalgic about what we’ve done,” Litzén said, “even though it’s hard for designers to be nostalgic because you want to make something new.” Yang expanded: “You have memories, and then you can create—you cannot create on nothing. It felt good to reflect on what we have done and be honest about it.”

The collection did include some reissues, like a rubber sweater vest from an early outing and their original red dress, first introduced in 2017. A particularly stunning piece was a jacket first from 2019 that’s tailored and slim but fills out at the hip. All were made with better fabrics and the precise cutting they’re known for. Watching the show it felt like a privilege to witness designers like these evolve over time.

But there was also newness, most of it very good and executed with confidence. “When you have 10 years under your belt you take more chances,” Litzén said. Their newfound boldness came primarily in the shape of interesting volumes: a ballgown-like apron, a grand shoulder drape, some dramatic wraps, and even a pretty fabulous veil on a baseball cap. These punctuated the pragmatism of great trousers, easy eveningwear, and some fantastic windbreakers. “I think we managed to get a good flow,” Litzén concluded.

Apropos, the duo said that for this collection they ruminated on the lunar cycle and its effect on tides and waves—the ebb and flow of energy, the natural rhythm of the ocean. It’s a poetic way of reflecting on their own growth, but it had a practical effect on their collection, too. These were clothes that looked as good coming as they did going. “We wanted something that felt grand, like a big wave,” said Yang. May the next decade be just that.

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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Yirantian Shanghai Spring 2026 Collection
Fashion

Yirantian Shanghai Spring 2026 Collection

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Not unlike elsewhere in fashion, many of Shanghai’s buzziest labels are helmed by men. They often go viral online for their theatrics and are widely known for their carefully architected runway narratives. They’re robust businesses that have helped put Shanghai Fashion Week on the map, but it’s fair to say that they’re mostly built on projections of what women should wear and who they should be. Not Yirantian. Yirantian Guo’s eponymous label is a thoughtful examination of what women like her want to wear based on who they already are—this as reported by the many buyers, editors, and other fashion types who often wear her clothes.

Guo is one of Shanghai’s leading women designers, a nuance that is crucial to her endeavor because of how clearly it comes across in her clothes. She doesn’t make anything constricting, uncomfortable, or gratuitously revealing. Her designs don’t sacrifice the wearer for the sake of the look, which cannot be said about some of the most talked-about collections in Paris. Guo makes clothes that look like they feel good.

Last season she broke new ground with a more concise, sophisticated outing, which she built upon for spring. She said that the idea here was to explore a “dialogue between sharpness and softness,” name-checking a handful of dichotomies: “rationality and emotion,” “unassuming yet resonant.” Moving away from concept to execution, the key idea of the season was to contrast neutral suitings with powdery pastels. She faced her tailored separates cut in gray and black wools and satins with these lighter colors, a detail only noticeable by the way a tiny little bell hung and separated a split collar. The same juxtaposition carried over as silk slips poked out of pencil skirts and lined lace panels. Knits were airy and light and each model wore cropped satin gloves. This was a collection full of little delights.

The second half of the show got livelier and sexier and Guo showed she can cut a mean suit and drape a fabulously wispy dress. Most fun, however, were a couple of carwash silk skirts shown under roomy windbreakers that cinched and flared at the waist and some tops woven from strips of colorful silks that came undone at the side. Guo makes some pretty wearable, comfortable clothes—and they’re getting better by the season—but the trick she pulled here is showing that she knows how to have fun, too.

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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Jacques Wei Shanghai Spring 2026 Collection
Fashion

Jacques Wei Shanghai Spring 2026 Collection

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

This Jacques Wei collection was made in 20 days. At a re-see in his show space at an extravagant salon atop a boutique hotel in HuangPu—Wei is one of two key names in Shanghai to show off-schedule and independently of Shanghai Fashion Week—the designer said there were two big reasons for the mad dash.

The first: Jacques Wei is H&M’s latest designer collaborator. He’s created a collection that will be available early next year across Asia-Pacific to mark the Chinese New Year. The 30-or-so pieces jibe with his opulent aesthetic, only at more accessible prices, and feature golden brooches in equine shapes commemorating the year of the horse. The second: Wei spent most of the time allotted to this collection working on his fabrics. He said that materials were a priority this time around, which made for a clever way of differentiating between his eponymous collection and what he’s made for the affordable fashion giant.

Wei works based on instinct and his general mood, and it must be said that he’s one fabulous vibe-architect. This season he looked at the 1980s, referencing colors, materials, and proportions. “It just feels like a joyful time,” he said, speaking of the look of the era. “I think we all need that, I know I do,” he explained.

True to form, he leaned into the bourgeois look of the decade. Wei used hammered silk brocades in deep midnight blue and gold, the former embellished with flower-like clusters of beads and sequins and the latter with bugle beads and shimmering paillettes. He cut these materials into mini skirts and collarless jackets with strong shoulders, which also appeared on jersey blouses with collars fit close to the neck but open in the back: “To make it more now,” he said, “it’s sexier and less covered up.”

Wei said he found jersey to be most forgiving—a promising discovery for a designer who works mostly with silks and georgettes, the kinds of fabrics that reveal every crease, pucker, and stitch. He draped and shirred it into swaying minis and frilly tops and one super flattering column gown, all with a flirtatious joie de vivre. This was a nice contrast to the excess of neutrals on the runways in Shanghai—and elsewhere—this season. If the economic landscape has subdued fashion into a state of ennui, that’s not the case chez Jacques Wei. He truly does make clothes for the nonconformist. And how fun was it to see his colors and prints in an ocean of ivory silks and black tailoring.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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Xander Zhou Shanghai Spring 2026 Collection
Fashion

Xander Zhou Shanghai Spring 2026 Collection

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

“This is to show that the pictures you’re about to see are not AI-generated.” That’s the PSA that Xander Zhou shared on his social media, accompanied by video footage of his collection on set, ahead of the rollout of this lookbook. There’s no questioning why such messaging felt necessary. Of late, Zhou has been toying with the boundaries of our perception and the limits of our sartorial comprehension. He’s added wings and screens and arms to various tailored pieces, considering themes of innovation, evolution, and the potential implications of living in the age of rapid technological advancement.

This season, he outdid himself. The idea, he said, was to consider menswear formality as a “default interface” that has been systematically assigned to people. Meaning, the suit is the standard and the uniform, a marker of identity in the context of society—it helps signal what folks do and where they fall within the traditional social hierarchy. In Zhou’s tech jargon, the suit is the data framework of identity, and it’s started to glitch.

This meant misplaced features or others that were duplicated or multiplied. You know when you’re on a computer and the cursor glitches and starts endlessly repeating across your screen? Zhou has done that with clothes, not digitally or with AI, but quite literally—and physically—by multiplying everything from lapels and plackets to sleeves, hats, and even entire jackets and trousers. The results are perplexing and outlandish, some more wearable than others, yet fascinating altogether. The button-down in look 35, for instance, flares into multiple plackets, while the jacket in look 1 has been exquisitely tailored to a slim fit but similarly opens into an abundance of bodices. Other shirts have multiple closed collars with ties included, and knit sweaters repeat themselves in such ways they start to resemble something painted by Salvador Dalí or Rene Magritte.

In the context of this concept-driven collection Zhou is rethinking seasonality altogether. This lookbook, presented as spring 2026, is the beginning of what Zhou is labeling SSAW (Spring Summer Autumn Winter). “It’s shifting the focus from seasonality to context, setting, and character,” he said, describing “an inquiry into states of existence within an unstable world.” Zhou has also done away with his recurrent use of technology; there are no LED screens or high-tech propositions. “This is a profoundly futuristic collection created through pure craftsmanship and tailoring,” he said.

For all his inventiveness, Zhou still provides some seriously covetable and wearable pieces. His silhouette this season is flattering and elegant, and items like the leather bomber with tuxedo lapels are simply desirable. What makes him matter in Shanghai and beyond, Zhou is a rare designer who can articulate his thoughts fluently with his clothes: Can our dependence on algorithms and technology cause our identities to bifurcate and corrupt? Will society’s increasing reliance on tools like Chat GPT make our personalities mere extensions of artificial intelligence? The questions are equal parts frightening and fascinating. Zhou doesn’t have the answers, but he knows to ask the right questions.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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