housebox
housebox

creativehungary

Saturday Programme of the 17th BCEFW Held in Spectacular Venues

2026/02/15


2038_NUBU__OMA0616_.jpeg

The 17th Budapest Central European Fashion Week’s weekend programme continued in the halls of the Museum of Fine Arts, where the Autumn/Winter 2026–2027 collections of established Hungarian and international brands took centre stage. Alongside the catwalk shows, a design fair featured pavilions of Hungarian beauty and jewellery brands, while in the Schickedanz Hall, the Fashion Hub workshops and presentations welcomed visitors.

 The Saturday programme series took place in the representative spaces of the Museum of Fine Arts, where, throughout the day, catwalk shows by designers in the Conscious by BCEFW category, regional brands, and leading domestic fashion houses were showcased in succession.

 

As the opening act, Nanushka presented its AW26/27 collection, which infused the brand’s signature responsible material use and refined elegance with organic textures and contemporary silhouettes. This was followed by the clothes line QUESTIONS by [UNREALINDUSTRY], which explored themes of faith, manipulation, and the distortions of digital reality – handwritten messages and experimental fabric treatments softened the monochrome colour palette. The morning segment concluded with the latest creations from Z.G.EST, built from architecturally inspired volumes, modular details, and neutral tones.

 

After a short break, CUKOVY presented its PUFF ME UP collection to kick off the afternoon session: the new line put enigmatic prints inspired by frozen landscapes and chrysalis-like volumes in the spotlight. The line-up continued with regional designers – Slovakian Petra Kubíková distilled the defining shapes and experiences of the past decade into her Autumn/Winter 2026–2027 collection, while the Serbian JSP ATELIER’s WO/MAN 001 series explored the dismantling of gender boundaries, featuring inventive, multi-layered fabric techniques, yet maintained a clean, minimalist visual language. Next, the Polish Jackob Buczyński took to the runway with his Shine Bright Like Jackob collection, which experimented with the possibilities of sustainable fashion through sculptural forms and rich material textures, constructed entirely from recycled fabrics. The session focusing on regional designers ended with Rafaela Pestritu, who, in her series No Fence for Wild Roses, paid tribute to liberated women (emotionally, socially, and physically) through a romantic yet strong visuality, including softly draped chiffons, distressed lace, and a deep colour palette. The Saturday programme concluded with NUBU, who presented a picturesque collection rich in textures, building on the 2026 summer line inspired by the art of Anna Peter-Breton. This time, instead of delicate fabrics, robust, hand-felted wool surfaces were placed in the centre, softened by organic, gradient, landscape-like details.

 

Meanwhile, in the Schickedanz Hall, Fashion Hub programmes complemented the day – physical rejuvenation was offered through workshops by Estée Lauder and CRÈEM, creative relaxation through Mittersisters’ rapid keychain-making masterclass, and intellectual refreshment via informative roundtable discussions hosted by Andrea Gere and Glamour Talks, covering beauty, gastronomy, and fashion.

 

IRATKOZZ FEL HÍRLEVELÜNKRE!

Alulírott, az alábbi checkbox pipálásával - az Általános Adatvédelmi Rendelet (GDPR) 6. cikk (1) bekezdés a) pontja, továbbá a 7. cikk rendelkezése alapján - hozzájárulok, hogy az adatkezelő a most megadott személyes adataimat a GDPR, továbbá a saját adatkezelési tájékoztatójának feltételei szerint kezelje. Tudomásul veszem, hogy a GDPR 7. cikk (3) bekezdése szerint a hozzájárulásomat bármikor visszavonhatom, akár egy kattintással.