
Songzio presents its Fall Winter 2026 collection, Crushed, Cast, Constructed, during Paris Fashion Week, returning to the violent origins of the machine age at the turn of the 20th century. The collection reflects a moment of rupture, when industrial force reshaped matter, labor, and the body. Through this lens, Songzio revisits its philosophy of order and disorder, translating kinetic force into form, surface, and structure.
The collection draws conceptual energy from the crushed steel sculptures of John Chamberlain. His approach to excess, compression, and permanent deformation informs Songzio’s treatment of menswear foundations. Early 1990s archetypes such as the frock coat, the tailored three-piece suit, and the high-collared shirt serve as starting points. The collection distorts and torques them, capturing the instant when industrial chaos settles into a fixed state.


Songzio’s sculptural fluidity meets the structural trauma of crushed metal, setting softness against force. Where Chamberlain shaped form from industrial residue, Songzio begins from a void, working across a black canvas layered with emotion and pressure. The modern uniform undergoes a sculptor’s intervention. Lapels, flaps, pockets, and hemlines lose flatness and symmetry. They fold, compress, and fracture into permanent asymmetry, echoing the jagged equilibrium of interlocked automotive parts.
Exposed seams and raw-cut hems trace torn edges similar to welded ferrous fragments. These details resist polish while remaining deliberate in execution. What reads as damage becomes integral to the garment’s identity, shifting ruin into a controlled visual language grounded in precision.

The silhouette moves away from early 20th-century tailoring conventions. Informed by Songzio’s oriental avant-garde sensibility, the collection creates volume without mass. Garments function as habitable voids rather than fitted shells. Traditional darts and seams give way to casting through torque. Fabrics gather and twist at the waist or shoulder, holding tension that recalls bent steel under stress. Coats and robes abandon belts. Designers pull and fix fabric into place, locking garments into states of sustained pressure marked by asymmetrical folds and drag lines.
Ghostly veils, bias-cut panels, and cascading verticals flow beneath rigid exteriors. These elements suggest vulnerability contained within compression, shifting against static outer shells.


Closures pull fabric across the body through deeply offset fastening, generating visible tension lines. Draping replaces conventional assembly. Panels of matte wool and cotton collide with high-gloss leather, forming joins that remain visible. Construction marks stay exposed, reading as evidence of force.
Coated cottons, brushed linens, and dense wool offer resistance, refusing passive drape. Surfaces carry weight and texture, holding shape through friction with the body. The color palette maintains a dark exterior grounded in black and earth tones. Inside pleats, flashes of cadmium orange, metallic gold, and yellow appear in motion, recalling industrial paint trapped within twisted metal.
Songzio Fall Winter 2026 addresses a figure shaped by pressure and survival. The wearer moves forward through debris, protected by garments that carry compression, memory, and force.

















