
The real opening act of fashion didn’t happen on a runway in Paris or Milan. It happened in Barcelona

Before the international fashion circus begins moving from one capital to another, IED Barcelona chose to celebrate fashion’s future instead of its present. For the 22nd edition of Fashioners of the World, hosted inside the Palau Reial de Pedralbes as part of IED’s 60th anniversary, 25 emerging designers turned the runway into a manifesto for what comes next.
This wasn’t a graduate show. It was a declaration.
Menswear and womenswear became vehicles for conversations about intimacy, vulnerability, identity, heritage, sustainability and craftsmanship, proving that the next generation is less interested in chasing trends than in questioning the systems that produce them. From Jon Navales’ emotionally charged Unsent to Simran Niraj Madlani’s Taste in Art, which challenged the relationship between privilege and aesthetics, the collections shared one common ambition: giving fashion something meaningful to say again.
The celebration extended beyond clothing. Fashion films, illustration, photography and even bespoke fragrances developed with MANE transformed the evening into a multidisciplinary experience where image, scent and storytelling coexisted naturally.
As the industry prepares for another Fashion Week season, Barcelona quietly reminded everyone that the most exciting ideas rarely arrive from the front row. They emerge from classrooms, ateliers and young minds still free enough to imagine a different future.
Perhaps the real fashion season begins here.