BFW AW26: DAMUR — Fashion That Floats through space

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Winter in Berlin is usually gray. DAMUR turned it into liquid chrome. At Liquidrom, the iconic saltwater spa, AW26 unfolded as a living experiment: a runway that wasn’t observed—it was inhabited. Guests arrived in bathrobes, chrome, lace, and lingerie, barefoot or clutching slippers, moving freely between sauna, steam, and pool. Phones were down. Schedules paused. Fashion slowed.

“Fashion SPA Day,” subtitled Do You Wet Dream?, transformed the space into an ecosystem where heat, humidity, and water dictated form. The poolside presentation moved in three acts—Super-Human, Super-Athlete, Super-Cyborg—turning body mapping, cut-outs, and lingerie codes into a physical language. Skin was framed, not exposed; vulnerability became structure; intimacy, a silhouette.

Do You Wet Dream?

AW26 balanced opposites: streetwear tailoring against flowing organza, oversized volumes against second-skin pieces. Knits and jerseys stretched and clung, coated finishes caught the dome light, metallics shimmered. Then the defining moment: three models stepped into the pool. Fabric floated. Light danced. Gravity bowed to water. Fashion became ritual.

Beauty and footwear were functional, real: sleek wet-look hair by Paul Mitchell, movement-ready shoes by Wildling. Sound shaped the mood—from warm house to tribal techno—synchronizing bodies, clothes, and water into a single rhythm.

Damur Huang’s vision was clear: slow down, reset, feel again. “We can always adapt and move forward with better energy,” he said. In the spa, his philosophy was lived, not spoken.

AW26 is more than clothes. It’s a system, a state, a sensation. Body, environment, and fashion converge—alive, wet, and unguarded. For one night in Berlin, the runway floated, and fashion finally breathed. https://damur.fashion/

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