
ArdAzAei presented its fifth couture collection, The Nightingale’s Rose, in Paris on July 6, 2026. Founder and Creative Director Bahareh Ardakani shaped the Fall Winter 2026-2027 collection around the nightingale and the rose, two recurring figures in Persian poetry. The collection treats their bond as a language of love and longing, then translates it into pleating, smocking, rose-patterned lace, silk and chiffon. The silhouette takes cues from the seductive dimensions of a songbird: curved hips, slim waists, long skirts and tops that trace wings.
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Persian decorative arts and architecture carry the bird-and-flower motif through centuries. ArdAzAei reads that history as an allegory: the rose signals beauty and perfection, while the nightingale represents a heart drawn to that beauty. The house reworks those ideas through modernist couture in 26 looks, treating each garment as a living manuscript that carries inherited memory.


Evening gowns and cocktail dresses form the main wardrobe. Coats and jackets join them. Deep reds and copper ochres take their cue from vegetal-dyed tapestries of heirloom Persian carpets. Exaggerated curves at the hips echo the body of the songbird, while long skirts sweep to the ankles. Corseted tops sharpen the waist. Wing-shaped cups and an A-shaped closure at the back trace the outline of a bird in flight.
The Maison developed an extremely fine red silk lace with intertwined nightingale and rose motifs, then layered it over flou fabrics, including changeant red-to-orange mousseline, to give the fabric depth. A corseted evening gown uses this treatment with wing-tip shoulders. Heavy guipure lace with rose patterning shapes black bodices, including a dress whose balletic skirt gathers dozens of swirling silk chiffon petal appliqués. Those petals appear to grow from the body like a kinetic bouquet.


Historical miniature paintings supply two traditional prints, which artisans distort and reconceptualize on organic silk chiffon and metallic fil coupé through intricate methods. The collection avoids real feathers. Mathematical pleating translates the textural iridescence of folded nightingale plumage onto skirts and coat sleeves. Geometric smocking recreates the architectural awnings of Persian gardens on the hips of evening gowns, linking the garments to the nightingale’s garden setting.
Ardakani also references the sublimation Persian poets such as Hafez, Rumi and Saadi sought. Embroidery carries that poetic charge. Glass beads, sequins and crystals create climbing roses on mousseline, while hand-stitching gives them feather-like brushstrokes. Zardozi embroidery, a technique with origins in seventh-century Persia, appears in deep copper thread along hems and recalls the borders of illustrated manuscripts.


The footwear extends the Persian references. Paisley climbs open-toe ankle boots in perforated leather, while other boots carry heavy guipure borders with the rose motif. Satin pumps in carpet colourways use ArdAzAei’s signature curved heels to close the collection.
With The Nightingale’s Rose, ArdAzAei turns ornament into structure and poetry into form. The 26 looks connect Persian symbolism with couture technique and turn the body into a carrier of memory, beauty and desire.

















