One of springtime’s most ubiquitous references got a streamlined redux, courtesy of Josie Natori.
After past collections referencing Japonisme and Japanese layering traditions, Natori looked to flowers, and nature writ large, as inspiration for spring 2026.
But don’t expect anything louder than Natori’s consistently streamlined DNA. Just as the designer has opted to make each of her collections more seasonless — “The amount of true seasonal runs are so short,” she said, noting her clients are everywhere from the tropics and the Sun Belt to chillier climes — she’s staying true-to-form with obi belts rendered in vegan leather, suiting with nods to a samurai shoulder and handkerchief-hemlined skirts.
The color palette, Natori said, was derived from all types of flora and fauna, ranging from chartreuse, tomato reds and shocking pinks to her hallmark neutrals. She rounded out the collection with jewelry, including coral and freshwater pearls, which are convertible from belts to necklaces.
With white shirting, Natori also reiterated on the classic, this time with tiered hems and cocoon backs.
Butterflies, hand-embroidered on a dress or featured in a print, ran through the collection, but not to the extent of the peony print. Peonies, along with orchids, are Natori’s favorite flowers, after all.
Most impressive of those iterations was a crochet lace dress, done by hand from head to toe to nail the scalloped neckline, in the pattern, which stood against mainstays like cotton poplin, silk twill and featherweight knits and jersey.
In many ways Natori said she’s simply answering a preexisting demand. “If you compare a floral print to, say, a geometric one — it’s [florals], hands-down,” she said. “People love flowers.”