Ashi Studio Spring 2026 Couture Collection
For Spring 2026, Ashi Studio transformed couture into an elegant study of mourning, desire, and control. Drawing from Victorian symbolism and executed with formidable technical precision, the collection moved fluidly between the sensual, the surreal, and the faintly macabre—without slipping into costume.






Corsetry formed the backbone of the collection. Constructed using 18th-century techniques, tightly cinched bodices sculpted dramatic bell-shaped silhouettes, with hips emphasized through rounded peplums and shell-like volumes. The effect was unapologetically feminine, disciplined yet charged with tension.
The Victorian obsession with restraint and longing surfaced most strikingly in the treatment of hair. Braided, twisted, and molded into sculptural forms, it became part of the garments themselves—referencing period mourning jewelry—or fell straight down the back like a spine. Elsewhere, ghostly handprints appeared beneath sheer layers, alongside fragments of faded love letters and red wax seals. Death moths, dangling keys, and other symbolic motifs lent the collection a quiet sense of unease.






Material manipulation was central to the drama. Cotton was treated with adhesive techniques that mimicked moisture clinging to the body, while trompe-l’oeil painting transformed flat fabric into bows and draped illusions. A translucent plastic layer skimming the skin gave one look the unsettling polish of a porcelain doll. Much of this work was developed in collaboration with artists more commonly associated with film sets, including members of the hair design team behind last year’s Dracula.
Black dominated, culminating in a sequined gown with a severe T-shaped back traced by tassels. Throughout the collection, backs were treated as focal points, adorned with bustles, pearl-encrusted trains, and elongated details that reinforced the sense of ceremony.



Accessories pushed the surreal further. Clutch handles fashioned from antique human-head door knobs—sourced from Paris’s Marché Clignancourt—blurred the line between object, relic, and provocation.
In its precise craftsmanship and disciplined darkness, Ashi Studio’s Spring 2026 couture proposed mourning not as absence, but as beauty sharpened by control—haunting, intimate, and deliberately unforgettable.

