SummaryMaison Margiela officially unveiled its Fall/Winter 2026 collection inside a Shanghai shipyard, merging its ready-to-wear and Artisanal lines on a single runwayCreative Director Glenn Martens leaned heavily into illusion and texture, reimagining an after-hours Parisian flea market through porcelain details, beeswax coatings, and “impossible draping”The show kicks off “MaisonMargiela/folders,” a massive 12-day activation featuring free public exhibitions across Shanghai, Beijing, Chengdu, and ShenzhenMaison Margiela is officially painting the town white. After teasing attendees with a “Bianchetto Kit” paint bucket invitation, the fashion house took over a massive shipyard in Shanghai to debut its Fall/Winter 2026 collection. Under the creative direction of Glenn Martens, the runway transformed into an after-hours Parisian flea market—a surreal world where living porcelain dolls, destroyed tapestries, and Edwardian silhouettes are obsessively repurposed. In a nostalgic nod to the house’s founding years, the show uniquely presented “couture” Artisanal pieces alongside global ready-to-wear garments.Leaning heavily into illusion and texture, the collection celebrates and evolves Maison Margiela’s foundational codes. Flea-market-found tailoring archetypes are dramatically altered: tailcoats are chopped or painted with bianchetto white paint, while double-breasted jackets are fused with second-skin jersey. The concept of “garment memory” is explored by gluing unwearable vintage dresses to a fabric base and ripping them off to leave an imprint, or by restoring a six-meter-long Edwardian dress and molding its layers together with beeswax.The runway was incredibly tactile, featuring dresses made from actual shattered porcelain, heavy beadwork and “impossible draping” where fabrics are bonded and cut to look caught in the wind. Maintaining the house’s signature anonymity, every single look was paired with an Artisanal mask that felt like a standalone art piece. By intentionally obscuring the model’s recognizable features, the house redirects the audience’s focus entirely toward the intricate textures, architectural silhouettes, and pure artistry of the garments. Finding new expressions within this familiar medium, the ongoing use of masks directly honors founder Martin Margiela’s original vision: a fierce rejection of celebrity culture that places the spotlight firmly on the collective craftsmanship of the atelier rather than the individual ego.Footwear and accessories expanded on the subversive theme. The season introduces “Level Cut-Out” boots that expose the foot to the toe, the men’s “Float” shoe featuring an upper resting on a much smaller sole, and “Tabi-claw” boots with a stiletto heel. For bags, the new soft-structured “Link bag” features a shrink-wrapped metal chain, while the iconic “Glam Slam” has been heavily sanded to mimic a vintage, worn-out leather sofa.The historic Shanghai show also serves as the launchpad for MaisonMargiela/fol