NYFW: AI is Calling and the Fashion World is Ready to Pick Up
Artificial intelligence was a theme and a design tool for brands like Ralph Lauren, Alexander Wang and Altuzarra

New York Fashion WeekĀ is the style setās annual invitation to see and be seen, zipping between shows and documenting trends as soon as they strut down the catwalk.Ā 2025ās iterationĀ proved no different, with buzzy shows from brands likeĀ Coach,Ā Cos, and Tory Burch. But there was a digitally charged undercurrent running through many of the collections this time around, and it concerns the future of AI in fashion.
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Designers like Alexander Wang integrated the use of artificial intelligence into the design process, while Altuzarra offered a poignant and more subtle warning against the dangers of modern technology. Ralph Lauren took a different approach, launching a unique AI-driven tool that aims to change how we shop for luxury goods. This all occurs, of course, against a global backdrop of concernāand occasional outrageāregarding the role of AI in the creative process. But ultimately, whichever side of the tech divide your opinions may fall on, the fashion worldās inexorable march towards AI continues, and itās only picking up speed.
Alexander Wang Gives AI The Wheel

Alexander Wangās SS26 show was bound to be notable, as it marked the houseās return to New York Fashion Week after six years without a presence, but it also made waves for a different reason. The brand boldly embraced the use of machine learning and artificial intelligence in the development and creation of its Spring 2026 collection. Titled Matriarch, the collection featured AI-generated backdrops as well as a unique 3D-printed stiletto created in collaboration with HILOS, a software and production company. Notably, the Griphoria stiletto was created without the use of CAD files or any waste.
If youāre wondering what this spells for the future of fashion, Wang remains adamant that AI has a very specific role in the creative process, and it doesnāt involve replacing the human side. āI donāt believe AI is going to replace creativityācreativity is the only disruptor. And AI allows us to reserve our human mindset for bigger things,ā he shared.
Altuzarra Explores Hyperreality
Altuzarraās nods to AI were altogether more subtle, and were inspired by the dangers of todayās technology. The carefully crafted creations deliberately invited close and discerning attention, intended to mirror todayās world, where AI blurs the linebetween the real and the artificial.
āThat we live in this bizarre, fun house world where we canāt really tell what things are, there was something about that that really attracted me,ā Joseph Altuzarra explained. āThe inspiration behind this collection came from this moment that I had on the street where I saw someone out of the corner of my eye walking byāI sort of caught what she was wearing and registered it, but then I did a double take and realised it was something completely different.ā The collectionās exploration of this theme was nuanced, and lay in the detail and craftsmanship behind the floral appliquĆ©s and surrealist motifsāimploring the consumer to slow down and take a closer look in an age when attention is a commodity.
Ralph Lauren Says Forget Alexa, Ask Ralph Instead

Fashionās foray into machine learning wasnāt limited to the runway this September. Against the backdrop of the fashion week calendar,Ā Ralph LaurenĀ debuted AskRalph, an AI styling assistant integrated into the brandās app for users across America. Created in partnership with Microsoft and OpenAI, AskRalph acts as a virtual font of fashion knowledge, capable of answering styling and shopping conundrums while referencing the entire available PoloĀ Ralph LaurenĀ inventory. Users can ask Ralph to recommend outfits for specific occasions, give them styling options for an existing piece, and add items to their virtual shopping cart.Ā
The decision to launch the initiative alongside the buzz of fashion week was deliberate, and signals that the American brand sees AI as an inevitable part of fashionās future. The statement carries all the more weight when coming from a brand likeĀ Ralph Lauren, whose identity has always been entwined with heritage and timelessness. Ralph Laurenās core appeal to luxury consumers has never relied on being at the cutting edge of technology, so what does it mean that theyāre embracing it wholeheartedly? Speaking toĀ The Wall Street Journal, David Lauren, the brandās chief innovation officer and a key driving force behind AskRalph, acknowledged the initiativeās criticsābut ultimately, he argued, āthereās no doubt that [AI] is going to become central as part of our world.ā
This article was first seen on GRAZIA SG.
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