April 20, 2026
Don’t Let Disco’s Ashley Moubayed on Her NYFW Debut and Elevated Beaded Jewelry

It was a cloudy mid-September Tuesday in New York City, the type when Mother Nature can’t make up her mind whether she wants to rain or not. Still, there was enough color in the back room of Cafe Zaffri to stave off the gloom. There, Ashley Moubayed was hosting her first official New York Fashion Week event for her jewelry brand, Don’t Let Disco. Half a presentation of Moubayed’s spring 2026 collection, half a pop-up beading bar for guests to create their own token.

Seven or so models—a few were members of the 2021-launched brand’s small team—wore layered beaded necklaces and tasseled stands from the new collection. Editors, buyers, and voices of the fashion commentariat (I recognized at least four Substack authors I follow) sat at white-tablecloth tables stringing vintage beads, rock crystals, and pearls onto cords. One woman brought her black cat, Pi, with a turquoise Don’t Let Disco charm clipped to its collar. The entire event felt like a convention of cool girls just as much as it did a tactile exercise to satisfy your inner child.

The goal of the afternoon was connection: between the guests, when they asked their neighbor for advice on which bead to place next, and between attendees and the jewelry they made. “I like the idea of the customer being involved in the process,” Moubayed, 36, told me on a video call two weeks before her formal NYFW debut. “That’s missing from luxury now—people just want something for the face of it or the status that it comes with. But luxury is more than that; it should really be an entire world you’re an active participant in.”

Don't Let Disco jewelry designer Ashley Moubayed at her Spring 2025 NYFW event wearing a gray top and skirt with a beaded tassel charm

Ashley Moubayed in front of the bounty of goods on Don’t Let Disco’s New York Fashion Week beading bar.

In the world of Don’t Let Disco, there’s one key tenet to know: a bead is more than just a bauble. “My mission is to elevate the humble bead into the realm of fine jewelry—to get people to understand the stories behind each bead, and to realize that there is a richness and a luxury in these stories,” says Moubayed.


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