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Derrick Spring 2026 Menswear Collection
Fashion

Derrick Spring 2026 Menswear Collection

by jummy84 September 19, 2025
written by jummy84

If Luke Derrick has seemed go quiet since his sophomore London fashion week show for spring ’25, it’s because he’s very sensibly been concentrating on the serious business of selling and meeting buyers. Developing things slowly and meticulously is, in any case, the whole Derrick modus operandi: it’s the nerdy nuances of his clothes that make them great in close-up. “I feel there’s the external perception of men’s fashion in London, where there’s traditional Savile Row and Dunhill over there,” he observed, “and then you’ve got really subversive things over there. And I’m in this funny gray space in between.”

That highly specialized space is inhabited by the class of men who are extremely particular about their clothes, yet reject putting on anything that’s fussy, uncomfortable or obviously traditional. Derrick’s exactly the man with the wardrobe for this ageless club of international coolsters—this time, with a smart eye for navigating summer city heat. “The challenge is that you’re dealing with the need for lightness,” he said. “But often with light tailoring comes the fuss of pressing—or you look like a wrinkly bag quite quickly.”

His creative antidotes to that were honed to “have the optics that slightly evoke old British legacy fabrics, but I want to demonstrate that these are things you can live in, scrunch up when you’re traveling, and they will still look good,” he said. This was achieved by Derrick’s use of state of the art Japanese fabrics, some coated with silicone and machine washable. Examples: the “broken” stripe on trousers “which is halfway between a tuxedo or a tracksuit stripe in grosgrain, which is a bit of a code through the collection,” said the designer. Similarly, a fusion which suggested both a bib-front dress shirt and a zip-up Harrington jacket. In cream, it would do for daywear—right up to formal occasions. “And it’s machine-washable cotton silk,” said Derrick.

However subtle, every piece will whisper its story at full volume into the ears of people who encounter Derrick’s work in shops. Like every young, independent designer, he has his head down “navigating a season where you’ve got a lot of instability going on in the world from all sorts of places.” Hence the work put into presenting to buyers instead of putting on a show this season. “It gave us the opportunity, I felt, to actually just focus a bit on the clothes, and capture the storytelling of who this guy is,” he said. “But what’s exciting is, when we do have a stockist (meaning clients in Japan and America) it really sells when it arrives.”

September 19, 2025 0 comments
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16Arlington Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

16Arlington Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 September 19, 2025
written by jummy84

In the 16Arlington studio in London earlier this week, a mood board was laid against the wall—covered not with reference images, but dozens of Post-It notes, each scrawled with short, snappy sentences. “We often start with these boards that are usually completely covered in words, and as the season goes on, we take them away,” designer Marco Capaldo said. “Then, we’re left with the mood of the collection.”

This season, a trio of bright yellow Post-Its stood out in particular: “British irreverence,” “New York slick,” and “Italian gloss,” neatly reflecting the trifecta of influences that tend to inform Capaldo’s collections. (The designer was raised in England within a large Italian family, and his collections often take their cues from the grit and glamour of Manhattan after-hours dressing.) Yet while the designer amusingly described the spirit of the collection as “Rachel Green meets Elvis, and everything in between,” the element that shone most brightly was a very British brand of eccentricity—clothes for outlandish London It girls with outsize personalities, unafraid to sling a studded leather scarf around their neck, or to step out in a sheer crystal-studded top with just an explosion of feathers hanging from carabiners down the front to protect their modesty. “She’s not a follower of fashion, necessarily, but somehow always turns out to be the most fashionable person in the room,” said Capaldo.

This layered approach offered a marvelous sense of discovery: turn up the sleeve of a crisp white button-down, and you find rows of punky studs fixed underneath; pick up a dress covered in yellow, lozenge-shaped paillettes and dangling strands of crystals and you’ll enjoy a full-on multisensory experience, with its gently percussive rustle and a surface reflecting the light like reflective road markers. (You’ll need to watch the videos of the collection in motion on 16Arlington’s social channels to experience the full effect.) As always, the clothes were impressively well made: a skirt and dress made from layers of leather, richly sequined silk, zebra print pony hide, and embroidered tulle could have easily felt a little “everything and the kitchen sink,” were it not for its meticulous construction and pleasing heft they carried.

With its deliberately maximalist, decade-hopping approach—lace-trimmed lingerie dresses that recalled the 1920s, the exaggerated collars of ’70s shirting, and yes, some ’90s pencil skirts that you could easily see on Rachel Green during her New York fashion executive era—it felt like a timely reminder of 16Arlington’s overall appeal. Quiet luxury, this is not: these are statement pieces that women are unlikely to have already in their wardrobes. (Which, based on the anecdotal evidence of what my female friends have told me, is exactly the kind of thing they’re shopping for right now.) “I just wanted it to be really fun, really fast, really emotional, just based on instinct,” Capaldo said.

A delightful final look paid a more direct homage to Elvis with its head-to-toe optic white, pointed and oversized collar, and marabou pom-pom boa—“my Little White Chapel moment,” as Capaldo described it. “I wanted to really celebrate that fine line between good taste and bad taste, because that’s where I think the essence of true magical style really exists,” said Capaldo. It was exactly that spirit of playfulness and humor, and a willingness to veer into the realm of “bad taste,” that gave it lift-off. The idea of the British eccentric might conjure images of Miss Havisham-style kooks wandering the halls of their crumbling mansions, or the rakish tweed and tartans of Withnail and I, but Capaldo proved that a high-octane party girl can be just as much of an oddball too.

September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Fashionista's New York Fashion Week Spring 2026 Debrief
Fashion

Fashionista's New York Fashion Week Spring 2026 Debrief

by jummy84 September 19, 2025
written by jummy84


After a whirlwind week of eyecatching runways and celebrity front-row sightings, New York Fashion Week has officially come to an end. Before our attention shifts across the pond for London Fashion Week, check out all of our Spring 2026 coverage of New York’s must-see collections, below. …

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September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Denzil Patrick Spring 2026 Menswear Collection
Fashion

Denzil Patrick Spring 2026 Menswear Collection

by jummy84 September 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Denzil Patrick officially launched its first take on womenswear this season, though sisters, mothers, and female friends have long worn the designs of creative director Daniel Gayle and artistic director James Bosley.

“We’ve really taken it back to our very first season, when we were making clothes for people that Daniel knew,” said Bosley. This was the brand’s 10th collection, and they were feeling particularly introspective. “Across the collections, we’ve built a story of British uniforms, clubs, scenes, and tribes, and now, we’re breaking down how people remix them and make their own style codes.” That’s articulated in the duo’s keenly researched storytelling, with a ragtag cast of characters as reference. Where fall 2025 was a brigade of speedway racers and medieval knights, this season was about the Teddy Girls, scrappy South London musicians of the ’80s, grandmas made up as ’40s movie stars, Cockney boxers, and the button-festooned Pearly Kings.

Touchpoints of these cultures and the brand’s South London heritage were reimagined for real and riotous lives: raw hemlines and sporty, breathable cottons, the front plackets of silken shirts sitting in a permanent rumpled state, a chaotic energy made architectural. Bosley, who also works with Dior Men, was delighted to introduce more detailed prints. Tailored evening jackets printed with old London postcard scenes, spangled with silver threads to look like shimmering Polaroids, were paired with black lace-up boxer boots. Sheer and sensual chartreuse polo tops—part of the brand’s “commercially successful” suite of “x-ray” knits, carried over from last summer’s collection—were toughened up with black bras and bloomers, and a sweet purple gingham bralette was paired with flowing suit trousers featuring a boxer short waistband.

The collection also featured a new section of hand-painted and sprayed jersey tops, something they previously steered clear of for fear that the pieces would subsume the brand’s tailoring message. A button-adorned dinner jacket, with Mother of Pearls creating undulating patterns, was crafted using a legion of Etsy and eBay suppliers—it seems likely to be a hit with their celebrity followers.

Making clothes that speak to the Denzil Patrick woman has been both a liberation and a challenge. “I’ve worked with different designers who have their own approaches to who their woman is—someone with a sense of power, or as these otherworldly beings…but I just kept thinking about my mum, sisters, and cousins…or an incredible woman I used to see in a dodgy bar in Beckenham. How do I make them feel and look good?” said Gayle.

September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Attersee Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Attersee Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 September 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Before Isabel Wilkinson Schor was making fashion, she was covering it. She left her job at the New York Times’s T Magazine just before Covid struck, and founded Attersee in 2021. “The need,” she said, “came from always struggling with what to wear and having a functional wardrobe that would take me through all these different lives I felt I was leading as an editor: office, after, running around town, meetings—and wanting a polished wardrobe where the quality was there and the comfort was there and the ease was there.” Price is key too, Attersee clothes range from $450 to the low $2,000s.

Naturally, fellow editors were among her first clients, and word spread quickly. The office space Wikinson Schor rented on East 64th Street was soon converted into a by-appointment salon, and in fairly short order, that salon turned into a store. “We now have to staff it six days a week and people just buzz—it’s mostly walk-ins.”

What makes Attersee so popular? The market is filling up with women-led brands trying to milk the white space left vacant by too-expensive high fashion. Some of them have become must-see shows at New York Fashion Week. As a rule, those women all have design studio or design school experience; Wilkinson Schor came up through news rooms. If the brand’s success is something of a marvel, Wilkinson Schor isn’t taking it for granted. In addition to the 64th Street salon store, she keeps an office in the Garment District, and 70% of the clothes are made locally. Every day is still a hustle, but, she says, “it allows us to quickly action recuts, make more really quickly for clients, make custome orders in a nimble way.”

The spring lookbook opens with an all-white look, as many shows did in New York this season, but there are other distinguishing features that differentiate Attersee. An appealing athletic streak runs through pieces like an anorak with an industrial zip front pocket and a dress with drawstring pull cords at the waist, while others indigo pieces like a handknit sweater and a nubby stripes shirtdress have a zen-like Japanese quality. As a writer, Wilkinson Schor said, “I was always so inspired by makers and creators, and the risk of putting something out in the world. I had so much respect for it.” She’s come a long way from the easy, oversized cotton-linen shirt she started with.

September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Claro Couture Spain Spring 2026
Fashion

Claro Couture Spain Spring 2026

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

Claro Couture Spain Spring 2026

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

Lauren Manoogian Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

Spending time in nature does wonders for putting things in perspective. Lauren Manoogian and Chris Fireoved live a nomadic life between the mayhem of New York City and the gentler pace of Peru, where they spend a lot of time in the countryside with artisans: maybe this contributes to the sense of serenity that is a hallmark of their brand. In addition, the use of age-old hand techniques and geometric patterns (whether they relate back to the horizontal panels of traditional ponchos or the T construction of the kimono) creates a sense of continuity with the past.

“Disappearing into nature,” was the starting point for spring—and the idea of hiding from the world seems especially tempting at the moment given the headlines. Intrigued by the “really crazy abstract patterns” you can find in nature, Manoogian created some of her own. Each of the splatter painted cottons was hand done and thus unique. The bark-like pattern, seen in the second look, was created with a “chaos” stitch. It was surprising to discover that the backs of hand-cut fuzzy garments (as in look 6) were neatly geometrical.

In a sense the whole collection was about order and irregularity. The strong shouldered V-silhouette seen in many of the looks was created, Manoogian said, by layering them over the single-button vest top (look 16). This outfit’s neatness contrasted with the asymmetry of an ivory knit dress (look 20), pieced together like a minimal Piet Mondrian. A knit woven with regular squares and cut in a square shape fell in an undisciplined drape; parachute pieces were irregular in their tautness, and Manoogian took advantage of the natural roll of some knit fabrics. The idea, explained Fireoved, was “embracing the imperfections of what handmade actually means.”

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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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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