
Feng Chen Wang approaches SS26 with a collection grounded in memory and momentum. Titled A Future in Bloom, the season marks the beginning of a new chapter. While the brand enters its second decade, the collection looks forward, but with a sharpened sense of direction. Wang focuses on nature, functionality, and craft, while deepening her relationship with the emotional layers that run through her work.
She opens this season in direct dialogue with nature. In collaboration with artisans, Wang revives her botanical dyeing practice: fresh leaves are pressed onto 45cm-wide strips of handwoven cotton using high heat. The technique leaves behind ghostlike impressions, each leaf transferring both its outline and its hue. These are not printed motifs but physical imprints, where each result remains singular. Raw fabric edges remain visible and deliberate, turning fray into feature. Color stays close to the ground, greens, beiges, soft pinks, anchored by the brand’s signature bamboo leaf pattern.


In contrast, Wang expands her material approach with nylon garments that undergo hand-sprayed dyeing. The textures here don’t rely on control. Mottled blues, layered unevenly, echo the sky in movement. These garments balance clarity and blur, connecting outdoor ease to structured urban living. Tailoring steps into that space, reinterpreted through light fabrics and pleated construction. Suit shapes soften, their frames structured but not rigid, allowing for function without stiffness.
For the first time, plaid enters the collection. But Wang doesn’t approach it as print or reference, she works with it through sculpted 3D tailoring. The material gains volume and form, shaped into silhouettes that lean architectural. Elsewhere, knits push into experimental territory. Unconventional yarn techniques create surfaces that feel tactile and unpredictable, resisting smoothness and pushing toward the raw.


Lace, too, plays a new role. Rather than serving as decoration, it anchors the mood, offering quiet contrast to structure. Its inclusion introduces a kind of soft resistance, a presence that holds both motion and pause. The garments shift between stability and softness without conflict.
Casting reinforces these ideas. NBA player Russell Westbrook opened the runway. His presence added force and familiarity, bridging fashion and athleticism without performance. Actor Daniel Millar and models Kit Price and Calum Harper joined a cast made up of both seasoned professionals and new discoveries, half of the lineup came from open calls. This casting approach reflects Feng Chen Wang’s focus on real community. It isn’t an aesthetic choice but a structural one.
