
Kim Shui unveiled her Fall Winter 2026 collection aboard the Eternity Yacht as it moved through New York City’s waterways, presenting 41 looks to more than 200 guests. The show marked the opening chapter of the brand’s tenth year and arrived just days before the Lunar calendar shifts into the Year of the Fire Horse. Shui anchored the evening in motion. The skyline shifted in the background, the vessel cut through water, and the collection unfolded as a study of Qi, the animating force that carries intention, memory, and transformation through material and form.
FALL WINTER 2026
Shui drew inspiration from Mongolia’s migratory history, referencing a culture shaped by constant movement across expansive terrain. She translated this lineage into garments that shift from insulation to radiance. Early silhouettes emphasize protection. Thick velvet, felt, suede, leather, and faux fur appear in warm tonal palettes, grounding the opening looks in density and weight. As the show progressed, the collection expanded into gold and silver metallic finishes, saturated reds and greens, jewel-toned silks, and animal prints. Luminous surfaces and oversized metal jewelry introduced heightened intensity, while beaded detailing reinforced the collection’s textural complexity.

Heritage operates as structure throughout the lineup. Shui reimagines traditional Chinese knotting as architectural framework. Select garments rely entirely on tensioned cord and handwork, transforming a decorative practice into load-bearing construction. Each knot functions as connector and spine, binding craft, cultural memory, and the human hand into a cohesive system. Exaggerated pankou closures appear across multiple looks, operating simultaneously as fastening mechanism, embellishment, and structural axis.
Hair and makeup extend the collection’s dialogue with lineage and transformation. Some models wear lacquered styles folded into ribbon-like forms, while others present voluminous curls that counterbalance the precision. Diffused rose tones, luminous skin, and graphic liner maintain clarity and focus. Nails by Sojin Oh for Sojinails reference zhijiatao, traditional Chinese royal nail ornamentation, through elongated pointed silhouettes in deep reds and gold tones, nude lacquered finishes, and liquid silver designs. Beauty details support the collection’s material language without competing for dominance.

The staging reinforces Shui’s focus on movement. The yacht serves as a contemporary counterpart to the horse, a symbol of mobility and endurance. As models walked, a live guzheng performance by Nico Huzella created a layered sonic rhythm that echoed the collection’s themes of continuity and transformation. Massive Attack’s “Angel” followed, shifting the atmosphere toward a cinematic register. Guests experienced the show within this evolving environment, sharing space with the models as the city passed by. The setting affirmed Shui’s central premise: progress unfolds through motion, not fixed ground.

















