The programme for Ukrainian Fashion Week Autumn–Winter 2026/27 has been announced
Forty Ukrainian brands will present their collections in the official Fashion Week programme, which includes shows, presentations and a trade show. Participants include UFW resident designers from the first season in 1997, as well as new names who debuted in the New Names programme and became finalists in the Look to the Future competition.
The organisers emphasise that the FW26/27 season highlights the stability and continuity of the Ukrainian fashion community, which continues to work and develop despite the full-scale war. This year's focus is on sustainable and innovative approaches to design, responsible production, and the use of new technologies and materials.
Co-founder and CEO of Ukrainian Fashion Week Iryna Danylevska notes that today Ukrainian designers are shaping not just collections, but a vision of the future of fashion, in which creativity is combined with social and environmental responsibility. According to her, the projects presented this season are a response to global challenges and, at the same time, examples of unique solutions created in Ukraine.
An important event of the season will be the Art of Fashion: Sustainable Innovations exhibition at the Mystetskyi Arsenal. The brands BEVZA, J'AMEMME, KSENIASCHNAIDER, LITKOVSKA, NADYA DZYAK, OMELIA, PLNGNS, TG Botanical, UPSLOWUSE and the UFEG fashion school will take part in it. They will present looks created using upcycling, recycling, zero-waste production and innovative technologies. Among the exhibits is a look by the NADYA DZYAK brand, created as part of the Kering S|STYLE – DENIM LAB initiative with the support of Kering's Material Innovation Lab.
Ukrainian Fashion Week FW26/27 once again confirms the role of Ukrainian fashion as a strong professional community and an instrument of cultural diplomacy that shapes the future even in today's extremely difficult conditions.
Ukrainian Fashion Week, Autumn-Winter 2026/27, Ukrainian fashion, designers, sustainability, innovation, Mystetskyi Arsenal, Kyiv