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Issey Miyake presented an elegant and poetic SS27 collection in Paris for their label IM Men. Photograph (above) and cover picture by Jay Zoo for DAM. |
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The atmospheric, pale tones of the Paris runway was contrasted with tall, black bamboo poles. |
"The collection explores the perceptive intensity and sensorial flux evoked by the delicate presence of bamboo shadows, expressing them through clothing," the designers Sen Kawahara, Yuki Itakura and Nobutaka Kobayashi explained. That deceptively simple statement became the intellectual foundation for one of the week's most considered collections, where craftsmanship and experimentation unfolded with remarkable clarity.
Before the first look appeared, the audience was immersed in an abstract landscape of ethereal white with black bamboo and translucent screens. Shadowy figures drifted behind the semi-transparent installation, their outlines slowly sharpening as they stepped forward. The staging immediately established the collection's central dialogue between concealment and revelation, a recurring theme that continued throughout the show.
"The collection explores the perceptive intensity and sensorial flux evoked by the delicate presence of bamboo shadows, expressing them through clothing"
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Bamboo shadows, a range inspired by East Asian ink paintings and intricate, paper stencils used in katazome dyeing. |
The opening sequence introduced immaculate tailoring in black and white, where finely printed bamboo shadows drifted across sharply cut coats and relaxed suits. Produced using the Japanese ironaki dyeing technique on bamboo fibre blended with organic cotton, the prints possessed an extraordinary softness that blurred the boundary between textile and artwork.
As the collection evolved, silhouette became increasingly expressive. Oversized outerwear enveloped the body with effortless ease, while generous dolman sleeves and sculptural collars created garments that floated rather than imposed themselves. One particularly memorable series referenced the layered ceremonial robes associated with Princess Kaguya from The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, translating historical dress into striking contemporary volumes without resorting to costume.
Lightweight denim carried subtle hand-finished bleaching that recreated the tonal gradients of bamboo depicted in ink landscapes
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Denim in tonal gradients was created in a lightweight version with subtle bleaching. |
Lightweight denim carried subtle hand-finished bleaching that recreated the tonal gradients of bamboo depicted in ink landscapes, while jacquard fabrics reproduced the woven geometry of traditional bamboo basketry with astonishing three-dimensional precision. Blousons engineered from single rectangular pattern pieces revealed the studio's continuing fascination with reducing construction to its purest form.
Pleating, an enduring signature within the Miyake canon, was approached with fresh purpose. Instead of functioning merely as decoration, rhythmic hand-worked folds echoed the segmented structure of bamboo stems, giving garments an architectural rhythm that constantly shifted as the wearer moved. The result was clothing that appeared simultaneously sculptural and remarkably weightless.
Carefully removed pocket structures exposed underlying layers, allowing absence itself to become an active design element
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Cut-outs were a feature, making negative space part of the design. |
Carefully removed pocket structures exposed underlying layers, allowing absence itself to become an active design element. It was an elegant reminder that innovation often comes through restraint rather than addition.
Accessories extended the narrative with equal intelligence. Soft leather bags borrowed their form from chimaki, the traditional bamboo leaf-wrapped delicacy, while woven hats and sculptural headpieces subtly reinforced the show's botanical inspiration. Completing the looks was the latest evolution of Issey Miyake footwear, developed alongside ASICS, where the shoe's technical framework disappeared beneath a seamless textile skin, elegantly dissolving the distinction between sportswear and design object.
Every colour felt connected to the changing light within a bamboo grove rather than the dictates of seasonal fashion.
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The black and white part of the collection, was enlivened with deep blues and pinks. |
While many collections this season have relied on spectacle to generate conversation, IM Men demonstrated that genuine innovation speaks with greater authority. In Praise of Bamboo Shadows was not simply another exercise in technical excellence from the Miyake Design Studio. It was a reminder that fashion's future may lie not in making more noise, but in looking more closely, finding subtle possibilities in nature, tradition and the quiet precision of exceptional design.
See more highlights from the Issey Miyake IM Men Spring/Summer 2027 collection in Paris




























































