Blumarine Fall 2026 Collection
At Blumarine, Fall 2026 belonged to the diva. Under creative director David Koma, the house doubled down on seduction, delivering a collection that was unapologetically dramatic and unapologetically visible.
One year into his tenure, Koma has clarified his vision: the Blumarine woman does not fade into the background. This season, she arrived in abbreviated hemlines, sheer lace, and body-conscious silhouettes that demanded confidence. Glamour was not decorative—it was power.






Koma pushed the collection decisively into evening territory. High-shine lamé, sequined embroidery, and bold metal hardware defined the mood. Sculptural tailoring met fragile romanticism, creating tension between sharp structure and softness—a balance that has long anchored the house’s identity.
At the center of it all was the rose, Blumarine’s enduring emblem. It surfaced everywhere: printed across beetle-backed taffeta capes and balloon skirts; embroidered in vivid threads along the sleeves of a vinyl bomber and the legs of overdyed denim; cut into a red crochet mini; appliquéd in pleated bursts on gold georgette lamé; and stamped onto a liquid gold chain-mail dress. Even tailoring carried the motif, with baroque cameo buttons and metallic chains wrapping bras and jeans alike.






Butterflies and lions—subtle nods to Venice, a recurring source of inspiration for Koma—added a note of decadent symbolism. The theatrical impulse peaked in harlequin fur stoles, diamond-patterned coats, crinoline skirts, and a black goatskin corset molded into the shape of the house’s butterfly logo. These were runway statements first, retail propositions second.






If Fall 2026 proved anything, it is that Koma’s Blumarine thrives in heightened emotion. The collection distilled the brand’s romantic codes into something sharper, bolder, and overtly sensual. This was not nostalgia. It was a declaration: the diva moment is now.


