
Parsons School of Design announces Ensemble, the BFA Fashion Design Class of 2026 runway showcase. The presentation brings together 31 designers from 12 nationalities across 4 continents, forming a graduating class shaped by range, specificity, and a wide view of what fashion can hold. Through runway collections and product design, the Class of 2026 presents work across womenswear, menswear, and gender-neutral design, with dedicated approaches to size inclusive and adaptive fashion.
FASHION
The title Ensemble sets the tone for the showcase. The name refers to a musical group, where each instrument keeps its own sound while contributing to a larger composition. Parsons uses that idea to frame a class built from many voices, histories, and design positions.

Across the showcase, fashion becomes a site for social critique, identity, and cultural memory. The designers draw from traditions, political histories, personal experiences, and material research. Represented nationalities reach across the Americas, Europe, Asia, and the Caucasus, giving the class an international scope that shapes both concept and construction. The work connects dress to lived experience, treating garments and objects as ways to examine belonging, protest, gender, culture, and the body.
Several collections engage with specific cultural and historical references. The showcase includes work rooted in Georgian youth protest, Indigenous Filipinx spirituality, Turkish feminist craft, Southern American identity, Japanese repair traditions, and the material culture of Yunnan and Thailand. These references give the runway a broad emotional and intellectual range, while keeping each collection grounded in the designer’s own research. Ensemble treats fashion as a language that can carry memory, politics, ritual, and personal history through form, surface, and silhouette.


The Class of 2026 also turns attention toward process and responsibility. Multiple designers work with upcycling, circular design, reclaimed textiles, and slow craft traditions. These approaches place material decisions at the center of the work and ask how fashion takes shape, who makes it, and what systems support it. The showcase frames making as a design question, connecting aesthetics with labor, sourcing, reuse, and the future of garments after the runway.

Ensemble also expands the question of who fashion serves. The class includes dedicated work in size inclusive and adaptive fashion, placing access and body diversity within the graduate showcase. These collections push design beyond a narrow standard of fit or presentation. They approach the body with greater precision and care, treating fashion as a field that can respond to many physical needs, identities, and ways of moving through daily life.
The 31 designers present a graduating class with a wide view of fashion’s role today. Their work asks what fashion looks like, how people make it, and who enters its frame. Theory supports Ensemble as the official partner of the 2026 Parsons BFA Fashion Design Runway Showcase.

















