Published
June 26, 2026
Portugal Fashion Experience announces its program for the four-day event, which brings together fashion, industry, innovation, and lifestyle from July 1 to 4. As usual, the event will take place in Porto and Matosinhos, but will also make its debut in Ílhavo, featuring “fashion shows, presentations, an industrial tour, the Portugal Fashion Summit, BLOOM, Incubator, a showroom, professional networking, and experiences that blend fashion, region, culture, and business,” according to the project’s organisers at ANJE- the National Association of Young Entrepreneurs (ANJE)- which is supported by strategic partners and co-financed by SIAC under the Compete 2030 program, using funds from the European Union, according to a press release received by our newsroom.

This four-day event, launched in 2025, positions Portuguese fashion “as a vibrant, contemporary, and international ecosystem,” mapping out “a landscape of creation, industry, innovation, and lifestyle,” where “designers, brands, young talents, buyers, the press, partners, industry representatives, startups, experts,
and national and international guests” come together once again for a week of Portuguese fashion that extends beyond the project itself, strategically establishing itself as “a platform for communication, business, and innovation, capable of connecting creators, the industry, the creative community, and international markets,” the press release states.
“Fashion remains the starting point, but the program expands to a broader interpretation of the sector, encompassing geography, technology, sustainability, critical thinking, gastronomy, hospitality, tourism, and culture.”

According to Mónica Neto, director of Portugal Fashion: “For a long time, Portugal was viewed primarily as a country that knows how to produce fashion. That remains true, but it’s no longer enough. The Portugal Fashion Experience aims to showcase a country that thinks about fashion, creates fashion, transforms fashion, and exports vision. Our ambition is for this edition to be more than just a schedule of fashion shows: we want to establish an ecosystem, connecting talent to industry, industry to innovation, territory to culture, and Portugal to the world,” she says about the new edition, which follows the theme “Fashion, Lifestyle & Innovation,’ offering “a curated experience, built at a slow pace, where every moment seeks to have context, intention, and narrative,” explains the organisation behind the Porto fashion show, which has been showcasing the best of Portuguese designer fashion at the most important European Fashion Weeks and beyond.
As has become a hallmark of recent editions of the event, this season’s runway shows and presentations are interwoven with visits to factories and ateliers, strategic talks, and networking opportunities, among a myriad of experiences that also stand out for the cultural and urban spaces themselves, celebrating the ancestral savoir-faire combined with modernity, discreet luxury, and the warm hospitality so characteristic of northern Portugal.

“The goal is to reinforce Portugal as a creative, industrial, and lifestyle destination, projecting an image of the country that goes beyond its manufacturing tradition and embraces creativity, design, innovation, and savoir-faire as assets that set it apart on the international stage,” the organisation adds, going on to reveal the program that kicks off on July 1 “with an industrial and strategic focus,” with the morning dedicated to an industrial tour to Paços de Ferreira, open to the press and event guests, “including visits to leading facilities and opportunities for direct contact with the manufacturing sector, reinforcing the connection between creation, production, the region, and technical expertise,” the statement adds.
In the afternoon, ANJE’s headquarters, located near the mouth of the Douro River and overlooking the river from above, will host the second edition of the Portugal Fashion Summit, under the theme “Crafting the Future of Fashion.” It is “a space for reflection on the future of fashion, bringing together new business models, international positioning, heritage, craftsmanship, innovation, sustainability, and market connections,” the statement continues.
“The program offers a comprehensive overview of the sector’s major challenges, from how brands are built today to the international perception of Portuguese fashion, including the role of heritage, savoir-faire, and cultural differentiation in a transforming industry,” it explains, noting that the afternoon “also includes the Fashion Innovation Call, featuring live pitches , feedback from the jury, and the announcement of winners on stage, reinforcing the connection between fashion, startups, the industry, and new solutions for the fashion ecosystem.”

On July 2, the Portugal Fashion Experience heads to Ílhavo and Matosinhos. In Ílhavo, the event establishes a connection between fashion, heritage, and lifestyle, featuring activities linked to the historic Vista Alegre Factory and its museum, as well as the brands David Catalán and Maria Gambina. In Matosinhos, the former Vasco da Gama Canning Factory will once again host emerging talent with the “BLOOM Contest 2026, powered by Salsa Jeans,” along with presentations by young Portuguese fashion designers.
The day concludes with a fashion show by the Portuguese-British brand Marques’Almeida, aimed at strengthening the ties between “Portugal Fashion, the energy of new talent, and a Portuguese brand with international reach,” he emphasises, noting that the reimagined regional itinerary “deepens one of the format’s central ideas: fashion as a language capable of bringing places to life, revealing heritage, and creating new narratives about cities, industry, and culture.”
“Porto, Ílhavo, and Matosinhos thus emerge as complementary locations sharing the same vision: to showcase Portuguese fashion in dialogue with the places where it is born, conceived, produced, presented, and projected.”

On the question of the Portugal Fashion Experience’s active relationship with urban centres and their iconic spaces, Mónica Neto states: “We want the Portugal Fashion Experience to be seen as what Portuguese fashion needs today: not just a showcase for collections, but a platform for the future. Portugal has talent, industry, territory, culture, and extraordinary productive capacity.”
“Our challenge is to weave all of this into a contemporary narrative, with international ambition, capable of generating visibility, business, and new ideas,” the director emphasises. “This edition is precisely about that: showing that Portuguese fashion thrives in factories, in ateliers, in cities, among designers, in new brands, in innovation, and in the way we manage to transform identity into global relevance.”
Finally, on July 3 and 4, the Portugal Fashion Experience returns to Porto, at M-ODU: Matadouro, Outro Destino Urbano, hosting fashion shows and presentations on the main stage, which will feature established names, emerging brands, projects from the Portugal Fashion Incubator, new additions to the calendar, and Portuguese Shoes- a showcase of Portuguese footwear. The event also highlights names such as the Franco-Portuguese brand De Pino, based in Paris, which is making its debut at Portugal Fashion following Paris Fashion Week, and the designer brand Malteza, founded by Joana Maltez.
Also among the highlights is the Portuguese brand A-LINE- under the artistic and creative direction of Diogo Miranda, who has regularly presented his collections at Portugal Fashion under his own label- along with others such as Pé de Chumbo, Ernest W. Baker, Nopin, Miguel Vieira, AHCOR, Judy Sanderson, Veehana, Re(Veste), Susana Bettencourt, Estelita Mendonça, Hugo Costa, Davii, and Lo Siento.

The press release also notes that the program “includes special moments and formats designed to strengthen the relationship between designers, guests, the press, and industry professionals, reinforcing Portugal Fashion’s ability to bridge creativity, industry, product, and international exposure,” explaining that, throughout its history, the event has consistently chosen “iconic, industrial, cultural, and heritage locations as an integral part of its identity.”
“This edition deepens that dimension, not just as a backdrop, but as part of the narrative,” it states. “Each space is integrated into the schedule as a realm of communication, experience, and discovery, contributing to a broader understanding of Portuguese fashion and its ability to create value rooted in place.”
In short: the project is not limited to presenting collections, but operates within the sector as an ecosystem, showcasing the work of “designers, makers, buyers, the media, industry, culture, and innovation,” with a perspective on fashion that identifies it as “a creative, economic, and symbolic engine, capable of generating visibility, business, thought, and impact.”

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