David Koma breaks through with a proposal that demands pause, focus, and texture. Resort 2026 is not just a collection; it’s a visual manifesto. Think Mad Men meets Euphoria inside a silent rave. Presented in London, the collection is an act of emotional styling where romance isn’t fragile — it’s razor-edged. Femininity here isn’t displayed; it’s armed.
Koma —master of structure, silhouette fetishist— steps away from his most expected codes without betraying them. Instead of the classic bodycon silhouettes that have ruled red carpets, he delivers baby-doll dresses adorned with metallic petals, pearl bralettes that double as defense mechanisms, and skirts that feel more like shields than garments. Each piece pulses with delicious contradiction: pastel sweetness meets soft violence. Beauty meets tension. Body art dressed as ready-to-wear.
The collection is steeped in pop nostalgia, yet filtered through desire. Koma borrows Betty Draper’s restrained aura and launches it into a noir-club universe where the heroine becomes her own emotional bodyguard. The suits whisper power, not scream it. These are pieces that demand slow reading — like lost film stills from a 1960s movie directed by a post-punk Sofia Coppola.
What’s most powerful in Resort 2026 isn’t its decorative intention, but its politics of the body. Koma reads the feminine body as a tactical space, loaded with aesthetic choices that speak beyond style. It’s no accident that many garments are built with visual wiring, layered plastics, or embroidery that nearly cuts. The body isn’t offered here. It’s protected. It’s affirmed.
Yet not all is chic dystopia. There’s humor, there’s play. Koma weaves in references to pop artists like Mel Ramos, transmuted into skirts mimicking caution tape or “TV screen” dresses framed with hard edges. A visual language that flirts with kitsch, then elevates it into conceptual luxury. Koma knows irony can be couture too.
The color palette drifts between powder blue, butter yellow, carmine red, and liquid metals — a balanced symphony that brings freshness without excess. Materials are unapologetically tactile: reinforced silk, hard lace, satin leather. An ode to the desire to touch… and not be touched.
At his best, Koma designs like a director. But there’s no theatre here. There’s augmented realism. What he offers is not just wearable — it’s narratable. Every look feels like a frame from a movie that doesn’t exist yet but that you’ve somehow already lived. Fashion as story. Fashion as embodied choreography.
David Koma’s Resort 2026 doesn’t need noise to make an impact. Its power lies in its echo — in how it stays with you. In how it reshapes sensuality and femininity into something new: tense, soft, dangerous. Like a weapon wrapped in satin. Like a scream sealed inside a metallic rose.
Koma commits to the language of intention. Resort 2026 is his strongest chapter yet — and perhaps his most intimate. A wardrobe of sensual armor for a generation no longer content to be watched: they want to be felt.

