“Textile miracles happen sometimes,” Francisco Cancino remarked as he introduced his latest collection, highlighting his recent access to a reserve of silk fabrics. While the materials are indeed “very fine,” Cancino’s approach goes beyond mere fortune. His work consistently aims to express something deeper, often channeling Mexican history and memory through modern fashion.
Previously inspired by Nietzsche to delve into internal struggles, the Chiapas-born designer now turns to Jorge Luis Borges and his book The Aleph, which explores a point in space and time where everything coexists simultaneously. Borges’s work prompted Cancino to reassess his own creations, not as self-tribute, but with a philosophical and practical goal: to continually “bring them to life.”
The outcome is a collection that exudes vibrancy, marked by dynamic movement enhanced by bright primary colors, precise proportions, and silk fabrics that ensure fluidity.
For several collections, Cancino has balanced his artistic vision with the commercial reality of selling ready-to-wear. In this collection, he appears more at ease; the previous tension now seems to have transformed into harmony.
This newfound ease has led him to explore creative liberties, including a fascination with the bustle. Cancino draws on the contemporary trend of body exaggeration, influenced by Alexander McQueen, and applies it to Mexican denim, resulting in looks that are both romantic and timely. “I was contemplating the permissions I grant myself when discussing Mexico, and well, Mexico had the City of Palaces, bustles on Reforma, you know? It’s a way to narrate history with a pair of jeans. They look fascinating.”
Indeed, they do. Much like Borges’s Aleph, the collection embodies multiple dimensions: romance and practicality, tradition and innovation, artistic intuition and commercial precision. In Cancino’s hands, these elements no longer clash but rather unite within the same narrative.

