Episode 16: NYBFW Felt Off... That’s the Point.

EPISODE · Apr 16, 2026 · 46 MIN

Episode 16: NYBFW Felt Off... That’s the Point.

from Showroom Theory · host Showroom Theory

This is a companion to my latest podcast episode, a short dispatch recorded in the pause between New York and Barcelona. I didn’t want to recap in real time. I wanted to sit with what lingered. And what lingered wasn’t just the collections.It was the energy.New York Bridal Fashion Week didn’t feel louder or bigger this season; it felt quieter, not in a minimal way, but in a psychological one.Something has started shifting… and I want to talk about that shift before heading to Barcelona next week.What I Saw in New YorkAt the surface level, the collections I saw at NYBFW this season aligned with what many of us expected. But, to me, the way they landed felt different.There was a clear movement toward:* emotional storytelling over spectacle* restraint over excess* and narrative over trend-chasing/settingThese didn’t seem like gowns designed for immediate reaction. Instead, they asked for a second look… a slower read. And it was a pleasant surprise to find myself ruminating on specific gowns for days after seeing them for the first time.Collections feel inward right now. Personal, symbolic, and less concerned with virality. They feel more interested in meaning.And notably, they feel less obedient too.What I FeltThe real story here is structural, not aesthetic. There’s a growing, palpable split in bridal. A tension between tradition and reinvention, commercial viability and cultural relevance, and refinement and forward motion. And for the first time in a long while, those tensions felt visible on the runway and inside press previews.“A successful collection and an important collection aren’t necessarily the same thing.”This season, some collections were polished, complete, and commercially strong. And that’s a real achievement. But others felt unresolved for me. They were risky and alive. And, of course, those are the collections that stayed with me long after my last NYC cab ride. The Part No One Is ArticulatingThe market itself felt… different this time around.There was marked lighter attendance, more social energy than transactional exchanges, and more relationship maintenance than market-level decision-making.“It felt like people were there to see each other, not necessarily to see the collections.”That’s not inherently negative. But it does raise a larger question for me:What is market actually for now?Because I find that the traditional system is loosening a bit. Designers are opting out or redefining how they show during the two bridal seasons, buyers are more selective than ever, and brides are discovering gowns through content, not retail.And when the system loosens, the center starts to shift. Which, in turn, feels wholly destabilizing to those of us ingrained in the current process.What This Actually MeansI want to say this clearly: this didn’t feel like a weak season.It felt like a transitional one. And that distinction matters a lot because it signals a bigger industry change:* from image → to identity* from spectacle → to ceremony* from system → to self-directionWhat I’m WatchingI hope Barcelona will clarify some of these questions for us, but perhaps it’ll complicate things further.I’m watching for:* whether commercial pressure overrides this inward shift I felt in NY* whether a sense of urgency returns to the market space* whether the industry re-centers… or continues to fragment in new waysBecause right now, bridal doesn’t feel settled. It feels like it’s deciding what it wants to be next. And I’m so excited to see what that is… only time will tell.If you were in New York, I’d love to know: did it feel off to you too?Thanks for reading! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit showroomtheory.substack.com

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Episode 16: NYBFW Felt Off... That’s the Point.

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