
Ashi Studio’s Fall Winter 2025/26 couture collection opens with a confrontation: not between seasons or silhouettes, but between elegance and entropy. Born from a vision of a world in chaos, the show wades through it, carrying the weight of memory, decay, and splendor in every thread.
COUTURE COLLECTIONS
The collection begins with an image: a woman sculpted like a statue, face painted like marbled stone, veiled in the remnants of another era. Her presence is ghostlike, yet unmistakably physical. Old veils, tapestries, and drawings scavenged from Parisian flea markets become more than reference, they’re the raw material of a new mythology. Ashi turns these fragments into garments that feel both archaeological and otherworldly, where beauty doesn’t shine but haunts.

Each look in the collection reads like a page torn from different histories, repurposed through couture. The silhouettes suggest memories of corsetry, heavy drapery, and baroque ornament, yet the construction avoids literalism. Traditional techniques are eschewed in favor of invention. The forms shift unpredictably, corsets might float rather than bind, bodices crack open like sculptural shells, and textiles slouch with an intentional imbalance. Ashi invites viewers to misread, to question what is fabric, what is skin, and where the surface ends.
Louise Bourgeois’s influence runs through the collection as a shared language of distress and intimacy. Dresses evoke mended bodies, emotional topographies stitched together with unease. Transparency appears not to seduce but to suggest vulnerability; animosity and fragility coexist in sheer overlays and tightly wound forms. A cabinet of curiosities emerges in the material choices: mother-of-pearl, oxidized metal, lacquered wood, feathered embellishments, each piece contributing to a greater, if elusive, whole.

This is not a collection interested in wearability or clarity. Ashi Studio rejects the formulaic in favor of something stranger, more poetic. The result is a couture that refuses to sit still. Dresses collapse and rise like ruins and monuments, echoing the rhythm of a city that’s both rotting and rebuilding. It’s couture as relic, as ritual, as artifact.
There is a mystique to the collection that resists explanation. It wants to be felt, not understood. It draws its power from paradox: old yet new, broken yet composed, opulent yet eroded. Ashi has not merely presented garments, but invoked something, perhaps a spirit, perhaps a question. In a time when much feels unstable, this couture offers no comfort. It offers mystery. And in that, it finds its force.
