New Delhi : Bringing together some of the country’s most promising emerging creative talent, the MIW Design Show 2026 (Made in WUD) returns with its second Delhi edition on May 28 at the Visual Arts Gallery, India Habitat Centre.
Now in its second Delhi edition following a successful debut last year, the show brings together 60 carefully selected graduation projects chosen from over 319 student works presented during MIW Week at the WUD campus. The exhibition showcases emerging talent across Fashion & Textile Design, Communication Design, Interior Architecture, Architecture, Product Design, Transportation Design, UI/UX, Visual & Performing Arts, Animation, Digital Media and Business.
The exhibition reflects how young designers and creative professionals are responding to contemporary themes including sustainability, mobility, technology, identity, culture, wellbeing, retail, digital experiences and social innovation. Many of the showcased works emerge from live industry collaborations, research-led inquiry and interdisciplinary exploration.
This year’s graduating cohort has collaborated with leading organisations across fashion, design, mobility, retail, technology and creative industries, including Jaypore, House of Indya, Ashish Soni, Ahluwalia Contracts, Triox Mobility, Gravity Studio, AVAATAR, Cuvoid Creative, Smart NGO, RI Game Studio and several others.
Speaking about the showcase, Dr. Sanjay Gupta, Vice Chancellor, World University of Design, said: “MIW Design Show represents the future of creative education where disciplines intersect, industry engagement is central, and students are encouraged to think beyond traditional boundaries. The exhibition reflects how young creative professionals are responding to real-world challenges with innovation, cultural sensitivity and interdisciplinary thinking.”
More than a graduation showcase, MIW Design Show 2026 aims to create a platform where academia, industry, recruiters, galleries, media, entrepreneurs and the public engage directly with emerging creative talent, while celebrating the growing cultural and economic significance of India’s creative industries.

