
Sean Suen presented his Fall Winter 2026 collection at Paris Fashion Week through a presentation format, continuing the Beijing-based designer’s decade-long exploration of masculinity as a mutable, evolving concept. Titled “Second Skin,” the collection arrives with accompanying poetry that frames the garments not as armor but as evidence of transformation, the residue left behind when protection is no longer needed.
Concept: Between States
The collection notes read like verse rather than explanation. “Second skin is not a new form of protection,” Suen writes. “It forms when protection is no longer needed, by the body itself.” The language evokes molting, metamorphosis, the vulnerable interim between one state and the next. “A form held for too long becomes tiring. The pace slows. Movement reduces.”
This is fashion as biological process. The garments exist in the space between “a skin that has completed its task, and the next one not yet ready.” It’s a meditation on transition, on the exhaustion of maintaining form, and on what remains after the shedding is complete.
Clothes: Structure and Release
The lookbook images reveal Suen’s continued mastery of silhouette and material tension. A cropped jacket in crinkled, textured leather sits over an elongated white shirt with curved, overlapping hems—the layering suggesting skin upon skin, each with its own logic. Trousers tuck into substantial boots, grounding the ethereal upper body in something more utilitarian.

Elsewhere, volume expands dramatically. An oversized bomber jacket in pale fabric billows over a collared shirt, paired with trousers so wide they pool and fold at the floor. The effect is sculptural, the body almost disappearing within the garment’s architecture. A sharp-shouldered blazer with curved, almost scalloped front panels offers a more tailored proposition, worn with wide-leg trousers and dark gloves, precision meeting fluidity.
RELATED: Sean Suen Spring Summer 2026
Throughout, the palette remains restrained: whites, creams, blacks, the occasional textural contrast. This is not about color but about form, about how fabric holds and releases the body beneath.
Designer: A Singular Vision
Sean Suen founded his eponymous label in Beijing in 2012, bringing a fine arts background and early career in graphic design to menswear. He made his Paris Fashion Week debut on the Spring/Summer 2016 calendar and has since established himself as a designer with a sharp focus on outerwear and a post-modern vocabulary in which garments function as wearable design objects.

Originally from Chongqing, Suen has moved through various Chinese metropolises, absorbing influences across art, cinema, and architecture. The Fédération de la Haute Couture et de la Mode describes his work as “a compelling and personal contribution to today’s fashion conversation,” noting his “future-proofed attention to material and finishes that extends beyond the seasonality of a product.”
Finally, “Second Skin” succeeds because it trusts its own logic. The poetry isn’t decoration—it’s instruction for how to read the clothes. Suen asks us to consider garments not as protection from the world but as evidence of having survived it, the outline that settles after descent, the volume that takes shape when the body is held.
Discover more of the collection in our gallery:
“Fabric on the outside. The body is held. Descent. Shedding. Second skin remains after.“
In a season of spectacle, there’s something quietly radical about a designer who presents transformation as exhaustion, protection as something that completes its task, and fashion as what’s left behind.

















