#DAMUR Fall/Winter 2026 at Berlin Fashion Week

#DAMUR Fall/Winter 2026 / FW26 at Berlin Fashion Week

#DAMUR turns Liquidrom into a water runway for FW26 / Fall/Winter 2026 — three models step into the pool. Berlin in February is usually grey streets and black coats. So when guests arrived at Liquidrom in chrome, lace, and bathrobes—some barefoot, some carrying slippers—it was immediately clear: this wouldn’t be a normal fashion week night.

FW26 wasn’t “a show in a cool venue.” It was built around the rules of a spa: slow down, share space differently, let the body speak. Before the runway even began, guests were already floating under the saltwater dome an moving between sauna, steam, and showers—letting time stretch. Media were present, but the atmosphere felt less like documentation and more like participation.

#DAMUR FW26 / Fall/Winter 2026 Titled “Fashion SPA Day” and framed by the tagline “Do You Wet Dream?”, #DAMUR treated Liquidrom not as a backdrop but as an extension of the collection’s concept. In a city where fashion events often compete by adding more—more volume, more visuals, more velocity—FW26 stood out by subtracting: creating space for clothing to interact with the body and the environment in real conditions.

The SPA Runway, The poolside runway unfolded in three chapters—Super-Human, Super-Athlete, Super-Cyborg—moving from hush and humidity to sharper tension and metallic propulsion. The presentation felt quietly controlled inside a space that naturally resists control. FW26 translated the spa’s tension—heat, humidity, exposure—into a wardrobe language built on cut-outs and body mapping. Skin wasn’t revealed for shock; it was designed: openings placed like punctuation, framing the torso and limbs with intention and guiding the eye across the body as the models moved along the pool. The styling pushed a lingerie-coded edge—not costume, but confidence—where intimacy becomes structure and vulnerability becomes silhouette.

Across the three chapters, the looks played with contrast: streetwear tailoring against softness, discipline against release, and oversized volumes cutting against tight, close-to-body pieces. Knit and jersey elements brought tension and stretch—hugging, flexing, responding—while coated surfaces delivered sharper signals, catching lighlike wet skin under the dome. The result read as high-end streetwear re-engineered for a spa environment: functional, sensual, and relentlessly physical.

Then came the defining image of FW26: as the show reached its crescendo, three models stepped into the pool letting garments meet water in motion. Organza floated and shimmered under ripples. Metallic accents caught the dome light as silhouettes shifted. Movement transformed each look. The clothes weren’t just worn—they interacted with gravity, water, and the body, turning fashion into a physical ritual.

Beauty, footwear, and sound. Beauty and footwear were built for real conditions: Paul Mitchell delivered sleek, controlled wet-look hair designed to hold in humidity, while Wildling Shoes grounded the experience with lightweight, functional footwear made for movement over pose. Styling treated each look as a system: skin + cut + surface + proportion. Lingerie cues became design logic—lines that contour, frame, and emphasize the body—while streetwear tailoring kept the silhouettes grounded and sharply Berlin. In the humidity, materials behaved differently: knits and jerseys clung and released, while coated finishes held their shape and reflected the room’s light, making every step feel amplified.

Music shaped the temperature of the room: warm house grooves early, deeper house and breakbeat as the runway progressed, then melodic and tribal techno at the peaks—before dissolving into after-hours energy. Even the dress code wasn’t decoration—it was a social script: silver, chrome, soft lace, lingerie (sauna-safe). It turned the crowd into a moving set of textures and reflections. Between shows, the phrase “Do You Wet Dream lingered—half joke, half instruction.

If wellness is the new nightclub, this was the proof, #DAMUR treated wellness not as branding but as behavior—something real, shared, and physically felt. The spa environment forced honesty: under humid air and exposed skin, there was no hiding. Guests—including press—experienced the collection rather than simply documenting it. “I believe this is the right time to ask the industry—and the world we’re living in—to slow down, reset, and feel everything again with a new perspective. What kind of life—and what kind of world—do we want to build for the next decade?” said Damur Huang, Founder and Creative Director of #DAMUR. “Holding on to old habits doesn’t take you anywhere. I’ve worked hard to change my own routines—daily, monthly, yearly. It’s painful in a philosophical way, but also a relief. We can always adapt, and move forward with better energy.” In the context of the pool moment, the statement felt lived, not spoken.

The practical test was brutal: steam, water, heat. But the clothes survived. Beauty stayed intact. Footwear stayed functional. And the room kept moving—because the concept wasn’t a moodboard. It was a real environment, with real conditions, and real bodies inside it.

Do You Wet Dream? It’s easy to call this “immersive.” The sharper truth is simpler: the spa made the show honest. No distance, no armor, no hiding. The clothes moved with the body, flowed with the water, and became part of the environment Fashion wasn’t something you watched from the outside. It was something you experienced. #DAMUR FW26 / Fall/Winter 2026 is built to be felt: body-mapped cut-outs, lingerie tension, and street tailoring—activated by heat, humidity, and water.

About #DAMUR, Berlin-based label by Taipei-born designer Damur Huang, known for gender-fluid silhouettes, provocative storytelling and its signature ¾-heart. #DAMUR treats fashion as freedom: clothing as a language of identity, body confidence, and self-expression.

All images #DAMUR FW26 / Fall/Winter 2026 by the brand.

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