
Judassime presents the Spring Summer 2026 collection Lost Highway, a story that unfolds through clothing as much as through emotion. The designer draws from experiences of loss, survival, and reclamation, creating a wardrobe that tells of fragility, rage, and eventual renewal.
The collection begins with a vision of a woman waking from a nightmare called reality. She realizes her body has been used, her rights stripped away, and she confronts scars that only she can rebuild. This narrative becomes the foundation of the season: a search for fire and resilience in solitude. The clothes take shape as her armor, as she rediscovers how to protect herself and construct a new identity.


Judassime frames the tension between fragility and strength. Every garment carries the impression of something that could collapse, yet each piece also builds protection that may turn dangerous if threatened. Sweat, tears, and imagined rainstorms layer into the story, amplifying the sense of suffocation before release.
Days pass in the collection’s narrative, and scars begin to lace themselves into protection. She reclaims what was once taken away, reconstructing her body and her image. The garments shift into symbols of resistance, as anger cuts away any trace of male representation in the wardrobe. What remains belongs only to her, pieces that speak of autonomy, wings returning to her back, and the scream that carries both pain and relief.

The silhouettes move between feral and beautiful. Armor develops from memories of death, with skull motifs transforming into shields of tomorrow. Suitcases, once a symbol of departure, cut into fragments. The collection builds imagery where horror evolves into the beauty of the future.
By the final looks, she steps into freedom. The garments embody her readiness to move forward, protected, perhaps a little chaotic, but alive. Flowers appear as symbols of the life she once longed to live. Judassime channels this imagery into silhouettes that feel raw, protective, and defiant.

this is fashion, we should have more of this.