Some designers begin with a fabric, a film, or a specific era. For Andrés Jiménez, the man behind Mancandy, one of the defining names in Mexico’s urban fashion scene, this season started with a question: What would Britney Spears wear if she were escaping paparazzi in 2026? From that idea came Bladed Heart.
The collection retains Mancandy’s signature raver energy–provocative, seductive, and unapologetically bold–filtered through a distinctly Y2K lens with skin-tight tops, low-slung wide-leg jeans, and an effortless attitude. The new ingredient for fall: kitsch.
Flowers at Mancandy? If they were unexpected they were nonetheless effective. Hand-embroidered floral appliqués–made by the designer himself–appeared not on a romantic dress, but on an oversized T-shirt that preserved the brand’s unmistakable identity.
Cutouts, one of Mancandy’s most recognizable codes, once again took center stage. Particularly notable were a pair of oversized joggers with dramatic openings at the knees, originally designed in 2016. “In 2016, they were too wide and too long, and people didn’t understand the idea of dragging them on the floor, the holes, and all that,” he explained. “This collection I decided to relaunch them, and now they’re becoming a hit.”
The title Bladed Heart captures the spirit of the collection well: “It is not a sweet or innocent heart. It is a sharp heart, almost like a blade. Beautiful, but dangerous. Vulnerable, but relentless,” read the show notes. And while the collection did not strive for strict visual uniformity, it succeeded in expressing something perhaps more compelling: in a moment increasingly shaped by formulas and algorithmic perfection, the pleasure of experimenting, creating, and fully embracing one’s own instincts can still produce something genuinely exciting.




