Carlota Barrera’s fall 2026 collection, Shuffle Play, looks at clothing as something that passes from one person to another, changing along the way. As the designer explained, it explores “the emotional residue of inheritance,” focusing on garments that are kept and worn beyond their original context. The idea is simple: clothes don’t start with us, and they don’t end with us either.
The silhouettes felt slightly off—sleeves too long, waists a bit tight, collars not quite in place—like pieces borrowed from someone else and never adjusted. These details gave the collection a quiet sense of history, without feeling nostalgic. There was an emphasis on use rather than memory, on how clothes continue to exist and function over time.
Classic tailoring was the base, but it wass disrupted with printed details, layered elements, and textures that didn’t fully match. Some garments referenced pieces that are no longer there, while others combined different fabrics in one, including reversible designs that shifted depending on how they were worn. This added a practical dimension, but also reinforced the idea of clothing as something flexible.
The palette stayed muted—browns, navy, green, gray—with only a few brighter accents. Accessories like mohair scarves and knitted beanies introduced a softer, more relaxed note, balancing the structure of the tailoring.
Nothing was meant to fully match, and that was a key to the collection. It came together like a mix of different moments, different owners—what Barrera described as “a wardrobe assembled almost at random, like pressing shuffle on a playlist.” The result? A collection that felt personal, ongoing, and shaped over time rather than fixed in a single season.




