
Songzio Spring Summer 2026 collection arrives with sharp intent, framed under the concept of Polyptych, a structure made of many panels, each fragment dependent on the next. The collection functions in the same way: a sequence of disassembled parts that come into focus only when considered as one. Maximizing tension between past and future, Songzio builds a system of garments that stretch beyond clothing into conceptual form.
The pieces revolt against standard shapes. Silhouettes ignore familiar proportions, leaning instead into distortion, asymmetry, and imbalance. Traditional garments serve as raw material, not final form. The Korean hanbok and Western armor undergo disruption, sliced and restructured. Rather than erasing their references, the collection lets them linger beneath the surface, warped but still recognizable. Songzio doesn’t conceal construction; seams act as scars, visible and purposeful.


Each design plays with shape and space. Forms hover, break, and jut away from the body, never aiming to trace it. Volume swells outward, often at unexpected points, giving garments a presence that resists neat categorization. The effect recalls Korean art theory, where negative space does not signal emptiness, but presence. In this logic, even the absence of fabric feels active.
Songzio turns construction into narrative. Sleeves trail behind, hems shoot out of alignment, and fabric panels interrupt each other rather than align. These gestures transform clothing into motion studies, nothing remains static. Bias cuts and asymmetric lines give the collection a rhythm that reshapes the wearer in real time. Panels create tension, not closure. Transparency allows glimpses of layers beneath, adding dimension to silhouettes that already operate outside expectation.


The color palette maintains restraint but avoids neutrality. Deep, muted earth tones ground the collection while sharp jolts of vermilion and yellow slice through with a metallic shimmer. Glitch-like shifts in tone offer just enough disruption to keep the eye unsettled.
Songzio contrasts material origins with finish. Organic cotton, boiled wool, and washed linen hold references to natural beauty and restraint. These surfaces push against high-shine synthetics, glossy leathers, holographic vinyl, and metallic tweed. The materials establish friction between the ancient and the projected. Where linen softens, vinyl reflects. Where cotton breathes, tweed flashes. Songzio handles this contrast without smoothing the edges.
