Le Reve unveiles its Eid collection 2026
Published: 08 February 2026, 5:39:42

On Thursday evening at Dhaka’s Radisson Blu Water Garden, Le Reve unveiled its Eid 2026 collection, offering an early glimpse into the colours and design sensibilities likely to shape this year’s festive fashion.
The event, themed “Mosaic”, offered a bit more than a routine seasonal preview. Other than highlighting how Bangladesh’s festive fashion is evolving, it also depicted the way Le Reve absorbs and reworks global influences within local traditions.
Eid has long served as the country’s most important fashion season. Unlike global fashion calendars driven by designers and runway cycles, Eid style in Bangladesh is shaped by a wider set of forces: family expectations, social rituals, digital visibility, and the aspirations of a growing middle class.
What people wear on Eid is rarely just a matter of personal preference; it reflects identity, social belonging, and changing tastes. The collection on display captured this interplay with striking clarity.
A key idea behind the presentation was the concept of “print stories,” which treats patterns as thematic narratives rather than decorative elements. Ten distinct directions-from Spiced Bohemia and Artful Dimension to Mediterranean Inspiration and Minimalism Magic-formed the backbone of the collection.
Together, they created a visual landscape where traditional motifs intersected with global references, producing an aesthetic that was neither strictly local nor fully international, but somewhere in between.
Colour choices reinforced this hybrid sensibility. Teal and cherry red emerged as dominant tones, supported by layered palettes of neutrals, jewel shades, earthy hues, and deeper blues. The result was a colour story that felt both festive and restrained, reflecting the dual character of Eid: celebratory yet somewhat intimate, collective yet boldly personal.
Silhouettes revealed a similar balancing act. Farshi salwar kameez, macro florals, wide-leg trousers, drop shoulders, and Mediterranean-inspired cuts suggested a fashion language that resists rigid categories.
The growing presence of co-ord sets, layered tunics, and abaya-influenced designs pointed to a shift in how festive clothing is conceived-less as fixed tradition and more as adaptable, versatile style suited to multiple contexts.
The collection’s breadth across women’s, men’s, and children’s wear was particularly telling. Men’s designs combined minimalism with selective embellishment, while children’s and coordinated “mini-me” outfits highlighted the family as a visual unit. In an era where Eid moments are instantly shared on social media, clothing has become part of a carefully curated narrative of family and festivity. Fashion, in this sense, is not just worn; rather, it is performed.
“With Eid/26, we wanted to go beyond clothing and create a visual language of connection where tradition, contemporary design, and storytelling through prints come together. Every colour, fabric, and silhouette in this collection reflects the joy of togetherness, while our growing integration of technology ensures that the Le Reve experience remains as seamless and forward-looking as the fashion itself.”
The structure of the event itself reflected this changing dynamic. Campaign films, interactive segments, and curated presentations turned the preview into an experience rather than a static display. This mirrors a broader shift in the fashion industry, where brands increasingly communicate through storytelling and engagement rather than product alone.



