Tuesday, 3 February 2026

Berlin Fashion Week: Where Sustainability Gets Sophisticated, Danny Reinke's Autumn/Winter 2026 Collection

A beautiful confection of tulle was a highlight of Danny Reinke's AW26 collection in Berlin. Photograph (above) and cover with singer Ichika Uehara by Jay Zoo for DAM. 

At Berlin Fashion Week, Danny Reinke's new collection, entitled Numinous, unfolded as a study in how clothing can negotiate emotion, responsibility, and form, bringing together refined construction, tactile depth, and a thoughtful approach to materials. It shows a designer working with confidence and precision, creating pieces that engage the body and the senses while reflecting a broader commitment to sustainability and longevity. Story by Jeanne-Marie Cilento. Photography by Jay Zoo 

Deep burgundy-hued faux-fur
gave a sense of wandering in
a dark forest,
DANNY Reinke's is one of Germany’s most rigorous and concept-driven designers, known for his precise tailoring and uncompromising commitment to environmentally aware fashion. This season he examined psychological terrain yet anchored the collection in a disciplined design language.

The concept of Numinous, meaning the mysterious, the supernatural and appealing to the aesthetic sense, was translated through references to dark forests as symbolic spaces of uncertainty. Rather than literal storytelling, Reinke approached the idea through structure and material. Silhouettes enveloped the body, suggesting protection while retaining a sense of fragility. This duality became the collection’s central thesis.

Material innovation was a driving force. Reinke combined tulle and transparent fabrics with recycled and deadstock textiles, creating complex surfaces that balanced lightness and density. These contrasts were not ornamental but strategic, reinforcing the emotional tension at the heart of the collection. Faux fur and virgin wool appeared prominently in coats and outerwear, grounding the more ethereal elements and underscoring Reinke’s strength in wearable yet conceptually robust design.

By using leftover materials with irregular textures and visible construction, Danny Reinke made sustainability an integral design tool rather than a secondary consideration

An intricately embroidered dress
showed the designer's skill at 
producing couture-like designs.
A defining feature of Numinous was the use of fabrics made from collected leftover materials, including ropes, wool, felt, leather remnants, and raffia. These textiles introduced irregular textures and visible construction, positioning sustainability as an integral design tool rather than a secondary consideration. The garments carried the marks of their making, aligning craftsmanship with transparency and accountability.

The collection also marked Reinke’s first collaboration with Korean designer Sungyi Lee of Wala Design Lab. The co-designed pieces introduced subtle shifts in proportion and surface treatment, expanding the collection’s material vocabulary while remaining consistent with its overall structure and intent.

With Numinous, Danny Reinke avoided spectacle in favor of substance. The AW26 presentation demonstrated an evolution of his practice, one that prioritizes craftsmanship, materials and ethical production without compromising aesthetic clarity and it stood out for its restraint, coherence, and quietly assertive vision.

See below more highlights of Danny Reinke's new collection at Berlin Fashion Week



















Scroll down see more of the AW26 collection backstage before the show in Berlin 

























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Sunday, 1 February 2026

Paris Haute Couture: Under the Big Top - Stéphane Rolland Turns to the Circus for his New Collection

Celebrated aerialist and circus artist Natalia Bouglione performed at Paris' historic Cirque d’Hiver during French couturier Stéphane Rolland's new show, wearing one of his diaphanous creations. Photograph above and cover picture by Andrea Heinsohn for DAM

Under the splendid domed ring of the Cirque d’Hiver Bouglione, Stéphane Rolland unveiled his Spring/Summer 2026 Haute Couture collection before an audience including Brigitte Macron, First Lady of France, Heart Evangelista and Andra Day. The show drew on the symbolism of the circus to explore movement, discipline, and transformation, translating those ideas into a series of sculptural, precisely constructed silhouettes that balanced poetic resonance with Rolland’s trademark architectural rigor. Story by Jeanne-Marie Cilento. Key photography by Andrea Heinsohn

Jewel-like hues and a dash of
circus panache were highlights
of Stephane Rolland's collection.
CALLED Parade, Stéphane Rolland imagined his new collection as a circular procession rather than a conventional linear runway. Models moved deliberately through the ring, reinforcing the idea of ritual and return.

Rolland’s point of departure was the circus, filtered through historical, artistic, and architectural references rather than nostalgia or costume. The designer cited Pablo Picasso’s involvement with the ballet Parade and his depictions of circus figures as a central influence.

"This show is conceived as a circle, a ritual," the French couturier explained. "The ghosts of the circus return, not to replay the past, but to transform it. They appear, cross the space, and disappear once again. What remains are the silhouettes, the memory of movement, the emotion. The circus is reborn for a brief moment, carried by bodies, materials, and light."

The Cirque d’Hiver Bouglione, is a place whose history is inseparable from Parisian spectacle and performance. The show combined couture presentation with sales of tickets to the public with proceeds benefiting the Fondation des Hôpitaux, chaired by Brigitte Macron, to support at-risk teenagers. The choice of location reinforced Rolland’s intention to position couture not only as fashion, but as civic and cultural expression.

A recurring dove motif appeared across several looks, embroidered or abstracted in organza, crepe, and gauze. Rather than functioning as decoration, it served as a unifying symbol of continuity and renewal, aligning with Picasso’s own use of the image and giving the collection a subtle political and humanistic undertone.

"The ghosts of the circus return, not to replay the past, but to transform it. They appear, cross the space, and disappear once again"

Natalia Bouglione rises up 
to perform her aerial act.
Before the finale, there was the aerial performance by Natalia Bouglione, that thrilled the audience and emphasized the dialogue between fashion and movement that underpinned the collection. With Parade, Stéphane Rolland delivered a couture statement grounded in architectural themes and cultural references.

The Spring/Summer 2026 collection reaffirmed his position as a couturier focused on structure, coherence, and emotion, using the circus not as spectacle, but as a framework for rigor and form.

Rather than literal character depiction, Rolland abstracted archetypal circus figures through cut and material. The Ringmaster appeared through sharply tailored black-and-white looks and rigorously controlled lines. 

Pierrot was suggested through oversized ruffs, circular shapes, and stark chromatic contrasts. The Auguste figure informed a series of jumpsuits in black, white, red, and jewel tones, some accented with feathered shoulder elements or dense embroidery. The result was a coherent system of references expressed through form rather than narrative.

The opening silhouettes established the collection’s disciplined approach: asymmetrical coats, coat-dresses, and long structured capes in white gazar and duchess satin. Fabrics were treated as construction materials as much as textiles, reinforcing Rolland’s long-standing interest in architectural form. Gazar, crepe, satin, organza, chiffon, velvet, and Georgette crepe were used to build silhouettes that emphasized volume, balance, and containment.

Rather than literal character depiction, Rolland abstracted archetypal circus figures through cut and material

Coco Rocha wears a translucent,
glimmering gown with a white
ruffled cloak.

Jumpsuits emerged as a defining element of the season. Appearing in multiple variations, long, short, structured, or embellished, they articulated what Rolland described as garments that allow movement while maintaining strict form. 

These were paired with high-waisted trousers, sculpted bustiers, and ballooned shorts. Shoulder bustles, cubic sleeves, corolla skirts, and ball silhouettes created recurring moments of expansion and suspension, suggesting instability without overt theatrics.

Embroidery played a structural and symbolic role throughout the collection. Diamonds, crystals, rubies, topazes, garnets, quartz, amber, and lapis lazuli were used to enhance light and sparkle. Plexiglass brooches, cubic jewellery, and architectural headpieces functioned as extensions of the garments, blurring the boundary between clothing and scenography. 

The palette moved between black and white and deeper tones including red, burgundy, bronze, plum, honey, and caramel. These colors echoed both the Second Empire origins of the Cirque d’Hiver and Rolland’s interest in ceremonial grandeur. Capes, trains, hooded dresses, and sculptural gowns reinforced a sense of formality, while maintaining mobility through elegant proportion and fabric choice.

Scroll down to see more highlights from the Spring/Summer 2026 Haute Couture Collection in Paris





































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