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Kilentar Lagos Spring 2026 Collection
Fashion

Kilentar Lagos Spring 2026 Collection

by jummy84 November 4, 2025
written by jummy84

The first thing you saw when you entered luxury retailer Temple Muse was 10 models standing on podiums showcasing Kilentar’s spring 2026 collection. Founder and creative director Michelle Adepoju held an intimate presentation for the collection she named “Súrùlérè,” which means “patience is rewarding” in Yoruba. Adepoju transformed the store into a romantic and ethereal show space. “I was at so much peace when creating this collection. Everything really took time,” she said.

It was easy to see that this collection was a labor of love, what with its heavy hand-beaded garments and handwoven traditional textiles. Over the years, this buzzy brand has become synonymous with taking traditional crafting techniques and blending them with modern silhouettes. That means the pieces are wearable—beaded skirts, shirts, and dresses included.

Unlike previous seasons, which saw Adepoju create 20 to 30 looks, she kept it tighter here. “I really wanted to show that creating something small but curated, but also a very meaningful and powerful [collection],” she said. There are a plethora of designers, big and small, who fall into the cycle of creating more than they are able to sell. “We create so much, and a lot of it actually goes to waste,” she added. In an effort not to overproduce, she focused on several strong looks, including a yellow Akwete corset dress with lace and raffia detailing, and a multi-toned beaded V-neck top with a brown mini skirt. “As a brand owner, as a fashion designer, you are allowed to make your own rules. The world will adjust,” she said.

November 4, 2025 0 comments
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Oshobor Lagos Spring 2026 Collection
Fashion

Oshobor Lagos Spring 2026 Collection

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Five years into building his eponymous brand, it feels like Oshobor’s Peter Oshobor is Nigeria’s next big designer. “Wow, he’s an artist,” one guest whispered as the closing model, wearing a black wool set, eerily danced on to the runway holding two gold lamps. The collection, titled “Night has Come,” explored the obscurity, tension, and vulnerability that comes with nightfall.

This was an emotional show for the young designer, who was tearful backstage. “I didn’t expect it to be [received] this well,” he said. The standout look was a gold sculpted dress, made entirely from upcycled styrofoam, which resembled a woman’s body. Other key silhouettes included a full-length red lace dress, with a fringed half cape, and a brown cropped vest and brown skirt with fringed wool detailing. The clothes were romantic and at times a little disturbing, with gentle fabrics such as Nigerian lace paired with deadstock wool.

Oshobor’s collection provided a modern—and commercial—spin on African fashion. It looked contemporary and innovative, and like it could compete on an international scale. In fact, he showed part of this offering in Paris last month. “We’ve evolved from the traditional collection we did last year, because the idea is not to remain in one place. [Oshobor] shouldn’t be put into a box; it can spread around the world,” he said.

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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Boyedoe Lagos Spring 2026 Collection
Fashion

Boyedoe Lagos Spring 2026 Collection

by jummy84 November 1, 2025
written by jummy84

For spring 2026, Ghanaian founder and creative director David Kusi Boye-Doe returned to the Lagos Fashion Week schedule for the second time, bringing his fresh take on upcycled streetwear to the Nigerian metropolis. As the saying goes, one man’s waste is another man’s treasure, and Boyedoe has quickly built a reputation for turning textile scraps into desirable garments. It’s a move that earned the five-year-old brand a place on this year’s LVMH Prize semi-finalists list.

Titled “Paradise Regained,” this collection was composed entirely of upcycled garments and exuded a level of tailoring and craftsmanship that many would not expect from secondhand goods. “I want people to see [these garments] and wonder how many days it took to create,” Boye-Doe said. “That wondering excites me as a designer.” Indeed, some pieces took about three months to make, including a multicolored patchwork skirt constructed from tiny pieces of fabric, he said. For Boye-Doe, the true marker of a success is being able to create something unique on the market, while pushing the boundaries of our collective imagination, particularly for sustainable fashion.

Sourcing the majority of his material from Ghana’s Kantamanto market, one of the biggest secondhand clothing markets in Africa, Boye-Doe wanted to create a collection that “speaks to the soul,” he said, adding that “more is more, especially when it comes to upcycling.” Key silhouettes included a colorful, patchwork cropped top and matching skirts, as well as a floor-length denim trench, paired with a two-tone denim vest and matching mini skirt.

As the collection title suggests, inspiration came from John Milton’s epic poem “Paradise Regained.” Towards the end of the collection, Boye-Doe appeared to present his own version of paradise, one that is bright and defiant.

November 1, 2025 0 comments
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Emmy Kasbit Lagos Spring 2026 Collection
Fashion

Emmy Kasbit Lagos Spring 2026 Collection

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Not many designers can draw in a crowd like Emmy Kasbit, with celebrities and influencers flooding into the Lagos Fashion Week show venue. For his spring 2026 collection, Emmanuel Okoro, founder and creative director, said farewell to the old Emmy Kasbit. “This is not a continuation, it’s a rebirth,” he said backstage.

Okoro drew inspiration from King Jaja, a prominent figure and founder of the Opobo Kingdom in Eastern Nigeria. Determined to authentically tell the story of the late king and “bring back his legacy,” Okoro and his team traveled to Jaja’s hometown to learn more about his history. While exploring the riverine community, Okoro felt inspired by elements from the king’s childhood, the colors of his home, as well as his personal style. This trifecta formed the foundations of his collection. “What we try to do at Emmy Kasbit is preserve culture,” he said, which means embedding such stories into the fabric and storytelling of the collection.

Okoro reimagined what King Jaja would wear if he were alive in present-day Lagos, and the opening look paid homage to that. As the lights came on, a black and white image of Jaja seated on a grand wooden throne was projected onto the backdrop of the stage. Below the photograph, a model sat on a wooden throne, wearing a woven hat, a matching brown shirt and trousers, and an oversized shoulder bag –– an outfit Okoro said was heavily inspired by Jaja’s reign and ’70s Nigeria.

Heavy prints and logos once dominated Emmy Kasbit collections. This season marked a break in that cycle, as Okoro turned his attention to fabrication. He played around with silk, stretching the fabric to create fringe detailing on several of the garments. He also experimented with new materials, including linen and deadstock wool. Standout looks included a brown blazer paired with cream trousers and an oversized fringed bag, as well as the closing outfit which saw the model wear an oversized fringed fuchsia pink coat, paired with a matching knee-length skirt.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Lee Mathews Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Lee Mathews Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Last season, Lee Mathews filled the first portion of her 25th anniversary runway show with dresses, outerwear, and sets that were predominantly white. It brought the focus to her silhouettes, which are characteristically intricate, unconstraining, and wearable in equal measure. Her latest collection was born of a new excitement about other time-honed archetypes. 

“The pushing forward to find all the new ideas… I’d rather go and be reminded of some of the things we used to do that were lovely, and haven’t seen the light of day for a long time, and start to re-work those,” Mathews shared. That began this season with “digging through the linen cupboard” of archival samples to find pieces that sparked joy in the present. Her daughter Matilda—who scours eBay and Depop and other resale sites to find older Lee Mathews pieces, as a way of owning memories of her mother’s work from her own childhood—was a key inspiration. Mother and daughter refer to this accumulation of material memories as a “magic cupboard.” “It sounds a bit sentimental,” the designer said of the process of looking back, “but it actually felt right.”

That manifested in a collection of punchy hues, which played to Mathews’s abilities with color and composition, working as memories seen with fresh eyes. There were pairings of white cottons with bold primary colors, as well as nimble knits and floaty organza confections. Detailed patterns and girlish ribbon adornments were countered by invigorating monochromatic pieces, like a gauzy aqua-blue organza dress, over a corresponding slip with tiny flowers dotted across. Mathews can pinpoint memories associated with some looks, but steered clear of too-obvious replications of the past, using intuition to find a midway point between then and now. “[Most of] the prints are actually prints from previous collections, but you wouldn’t recognize them,” she added. “I think that’s what I would like to do going forward: take from the past to put in the future, and keep evolving the chemistry.”

She is also considering having the collection’s exhilarating pink pieces in store windows when the range arrives at boutiques in time for southern hemisphere high summer, for a jolt of energy and exuberance. 

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Katie Holmes’s Perfect Fall Saddle Bag Will Actually Last You Through Spring
Fashion

Katie Holmes’s Perfect Fall Saddle Bag Will Actually Last You Through Spring

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

On October 29, Holmes was seen carrying the British brand’s Siena Saddle Bag, which retails for $535 and features a large gold-plated lock closure. According to the DeMillier website, the bag itself comes in five different colors and can be monogrammed for no additional charge.

Just because Holmes went with a timeless bag design doesn’t mean she’s immune to trends. She paired the piece with a pair of black barrel pants and snakeskin boots, two items that have dominated fall 2025 trend reports. She kept the rest of the look simple with an white ribbed t-shirt, open black jacket, and a gold pendant on a black leather chord.

NEW YORK, NEW YORK – OCTOBER 29: Katie Holmes spotted with her hair in a long braid and wearing a Demellier bag on October 29, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Michael Simon/Getty Images for DeMellier)Michael Simon/Getty Images

The entire look could see Katie Holmes straight into spring, as long as she adds a nice cozy coat for those upcoming cold winter months. But we all know she has plenty of those to choose from.


October 30, 2025 0 comments
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Tao Tokyo Spring 2026 Collection
Fashion

Tao Tokyo Spring 2026 Collection

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s late in the season to be showing a collection, but Tao Kurihara, much like her mentor Rei Kawakubo, isn’t one to follow the crowd. The enigmatic designer, who now shows each season to a small domestic audience at the Comme des Garçons HQ in Aoyama, represents the most romantic side of the CDG stable. It’s also commercially minded in its way, managing to wrangle the whimsical into the wearable.

Accompanied by a chipper folksy soundtrack, this outing was full of big, confident shapes that snapped consummately between monochrome, dowdy neutrals and sweeps of sugary pastels. Towards the middle of the show we moved into stripes and gingham, spread monochrome and mime-like in different scales across big skirts, roomy trousers, and tiny jackets. Later, those gingham skirts that faded into sepia orange like an old photograph. For those who want to shop Comme off the runway, Tao is the best place to do it. Particularly in this collection, there were plenty of pieces that Comme devotees will enjoy, from the cropped flared jackets with Peter Pan collars, to the dotty floral dresses and peasant skirts.

Occasionally Tao shows instances of breaking away from the dominant aesthetic of the house she grew up in, but this season seemed to have committed to it wholeheartedly. Her show notes disagreed: “This time, I focused on creating the collection that stays true to Tao’s style—and to myself,” she wrote. Perhaps resisting it is futile: from the patterns to the silhouettes, the brand’s bloodline is clear.

There is a sensitivity to Kurihara’s work, however, of which she alone is capable. Some of the more striking pieces this season were created using prints of Fumi Imamura’s floral artworks, which came decorated with scarlet poppies across pouffy sheer skirts and cape-like shirts. They looked charmingly grannyish, and softly romantic in a way designed to please the wearer rather than the viewer. Per Kurihara: “I hope that by wearing them, one can carry the gentleness and strength [Imamura’s] work embodies.” That’s Tao in a nutshell, too: gentleness and strength. The delicate, the feminine, the flouncy—in a world that increasingly tries to quash those things, it’s timely to remember the power they hold. Bold yet balanced, Kurihara wields that power masterfully.

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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ManéMané Spain Spring 2026 Collection
Fashion

ManéMané Spain Spring 2026 Collection

by jummy84 October 28, 2025
written by jummy84

For the spring 2026 ManéMané collection, Miguel Becer joined forces with Ernesto Naranjo—a creative partnership that culminated in a dual collection. “We help and support each other. It’s about being able to talk every day, about finding someone who shares the same concerns, the same experiences,” said Becer of working with Naranjo, who has a studio nearby. The duo merged their respective universes to deliver a shared statement on contemporary fashion. “We have two very different points of view,  both in the identities we’ve built for our brands and in the creative formulas we use,” Becer added. “But we’ve been surprised: even though we each worked independently, the result feels bolder, stronger, and a lot more fun.” 

So, what’s the secret behind this effortless synergy? “We share the same sense of humor.” Becer laughed. That playful spirit translates into every detail—from the cheeky hairstyles on the mannequins to the spontaneous energy of the collection itself. “Everything came together so naturally; every idea felt right,” said Becer. The dynamic between the two designers, he added, couldn’t be further from rivalry. “There’s no sense of competition between us, everything adds up.”

The collection draws inspiration from the folklore of Montehermoso, reimagining its traditional silhouettes through a contemporary lens. To achieve this, Becer revisited the signature volumes and intricate dresses of this tradition, honoring heritage without falling into nostalgia. Textures take center stage in this project, with an emphasis on natural fibers and artisanal techniques, paired with delicate embroidery and experimental finishes. A subtle historical wink runs through the palette—shades inspired by the women of early 20th-century Montehermoso, who crafted their garments from fabrics brought by traveling merchants. 

This rich cultural legacy, reframed through a modern sensibility, evolves into a language that feels both versatile and quietly avant-garde—one that finds a natural dialogue with Naranjo’s creative world. “Yesterday, at an event, several of us from the industry ran into each other, and I went home thinking, how nice it is to have someone like you, someone you can share everything with, the good and the bad, and build a sense of community together,” Becer reflected. “That’s exactly what happens with Ernesto and me—it all comes so naturally.” And truly, there’s no greater fortune than that.

October 28, 2025 0 comments
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Vogue World Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Vogue World Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

© 2025 Condé Nast. All rights reserved. Vogue may earn a portion of sales from products that are purchased through our site as part of our Affiliate Partnerships with retailers. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Condé Nast. Ad Choices

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Vivienne Westwood Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Vivienne Westwood Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

While the Vivienne Westwood team’s spring 2026 collection was shot in a house close to the Champs-Élysées, captured in its light-filled chambres and wild garden, it was just down the road at Christie’s auction house in London where inspiration first took root. There, the late Dame Vivienne Westwood’s wardrobe was on display for auction: her fall 1983 Witches collection, a corduroy suit she wore for decades, Yorkshire tweeds, 18th century samplers. This set the scene for designs made for traversing the English moors, discovering the dark and decay amid the vegetation.

Rococo-style suiting, the impeccably tailored Bettina jacket, mini-skirts, and shorts that recall the Cafe Society collection were remixed in treated denims, windswept silks, and undyed, organic fabrics, with a rumpled and ragtag feel—like a tumble taken in the Garden of Eden. The ever-popular Sunday dress was made in crinkled gauze, and there was a spectrum of kilts in classic and high-octane colored tartans. Soft, airy knitwear sets featured a new take on the ‘Paradise’ print by artist and frequent collaborator Dominic Myatt, depicting a trash-filled, tarnished utopia—a tribute to Westwood’s climate activism and the brand’s continued eco ethos.

Nods to recent runway pieces from Andreas Kronthaler confirmed a growing sense of fluidity for the house, from A.K. to bridal (though, would you believe, the brand’s first-ever bridal-focused show only took place in April 2025?). In the mix were a bag-waisted pair of pants for both men and women, a diaphanous, inky-print jumpsuit, and sequin and trussed-up taffeta evening gowns. The Westwood lens on sportier sensibilities—including a pair of playful, visor-like sunglasses—and a deeper offering of the house’s classic tailoring reflected the wants of a younger audience who have become enamored with Vivienne Westwood through Depop dives and Bella Hadid. The brand has garnered increasing interest from young men, especially, looking for those slashed and remade silhouettes.

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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