
Dwarmis introduced its Spring Summer 2026 collection, titled Cuerpo, on September 12th at Cristina Grajales Gallery in New York. The presentation marked the brand’s first official New York Fashion Week debut, bringing designer Dwarmis Concepción’s vision to one of the city’s most notable cultural stages.
The setting inside the gallery framed the garments as both art and experience. Concepción designed Cuerpo as an exploration of the body in motion, situating anatomy as a language of memory, strength, and transformation. Curved seams echoed ribs and obliques, bias drape hugged before releasing, and translucent layers traced the rhythm of breath. Each garment functioned as an extension of the wearer, engaging directly with skin and presence.


The palette drew inspiration from minerals touched by light. Hues of blush, miel, sea glass, sage, and powder sky provided softness, while optic white and onyx anchored the collection. Ink black accents sharpened trims and closures, reinforcing the clarity of line throughout. The interplay of color supported the structural and fluid qualities of each piece.
Utility arrived in the collection as soft armor. Concepción engineered clothing to hold emotion and sculpt motion, offering protection through design rather than rigidity. Transparency and controlled structure balanced one another, creating garments that expressed intimacy and strength while remaining alive on the body.


Produced in New York City, Cuerpo carries the Latin pulse of Concepción’s Dominican background while channeling the energy of her adopted city. Since launching the brand in 2021, she has grounded Dwarmis in American ideals while enriching its perspective with her cultural roots. The new collection reflects that duality, uniting precision and ease, imperfection and form.
Through Cuerpo, Dwarmis positions itself as a label that sees fashion as both an object and a lived experience. The debut at New York Fashion Week confirms the brand’s focus on designing clothing for women who seek individuality, confidence, and elegance expressed through garments conceived as extensions of the self.

















