Friday, 7 March 2025

A Lace of One’s Own: Róisín Pierce's Meditation on Fleeting Beauty

A fine, hand-worked creation by Roisin Pierce at her AW25 show in Paris. Photograph: Andrea Heinsohn

Amid the gilded salons of the Irish Embassy, Róisín Pierce's presented her latest collection, during the Autumn/Winter 2025-26 season of Paris Fashion Week. The designs evoked an ethereal and poignant atmosphere, an exploration of beauty, transience, and the fleeting nature of art and memory. In a fashion landscape often driven by excess and spectacle, Pierce’s work stands as a meditation on impermanence, drawing inspiration from literature, nature, and the intricate craftsmanship of Irish lace and crochet, writes Antonio Visconti. Photography by Andrea Heinsohn and Elli Ioannou. 

The delicate, diaphanous
creations of Roisin Pierce.
Photograph: Elli Ioannou
IRISH designer Róisín Pierce melds contemporary textile innovation with traditional techniques. Her latest collection shown in Paris continues this experimentation, this time evoking the fragile and fleeting beauty of snowflakes and spring blossoms. Diaphanous designs in soft silks with intricate pintucks in white or midnight blue evoke her signature poetic aesthetic. 

At the heart of the new collection, called Nothing Pure Can Stay, is an exploration of ephemerality. The title itself nods to the inevitability of change, a theme the designer deftly weaves into her designs through delicate craftsmanship and the interplay of textures.

Inspired by the works of Vladimir Nabokov and Sylvia Plath, as well as the photography of Wilson Bentley, who captured the transient beauty of snowflakes, Pierce’s designs reflect a desire to preserve the fleeting. Handcrafted snowberries in silk and tulle, flowing pintucked petals, and embroidered forget-me-nots all suggest this longing for permanence in an impermanent world.

One of fashion's more beguiling designers, Róisín Pierce melds together historical craft and conceptual storytelling. A Dublin-born designer with a foundation in textile innovation, she first emerged on the global stage after winning the Chanel-supported Festival d’Hyères in 2019. Her devotion to technique: intricate hand-smocking, dense ruffles and pintuck details so fine they resemble embroidery is an antidote to an industry obsessed with speed and reinvention, Pierce instead embraces slowness, refinement, and meticulous artistry.  

At the heart of the new collection, called Nothing Pure Can Stay, is an exploration of ephemerality.

Transparency and opacity
added subtle contrasts to
designs in the collection.
Photograph: Elli Ioannou
Her previous collections have often drawn from Irish history and femininity, exploring themes of resilience and fragility through fabric manipulation. 

The stark, sculptural purity of Patience (SS23) and the intimate intricacies of Beneath the Embers (AW24) laid the groundwork for Nothing Pure Can Stay. Here, she is not only preserving heritage techniques but also trying to distill time itself into fabric, capturing fleeting beauty in stitches that refuse to unravel.

The collection takes its title from the Robert Frost poem Nothing Gold Can Stay, a meditation on the passing nature of beauty. Pierce, too, is drawn to the tension between creation and decay. Her inspiration also stems from Marcel Proust’s ruminations on memory. Each reference reinforces the fragility she seeks to encapsulate, beauty that is heightened because it is slipping away.

This philosophy manifests in diaphanous textiles and silk velvet transformed by smocking, creating rippling textures. Elsewhere, sheer tulle cascades from the shoulders of sculptural gowns, evoking melting ice or the last wisps of mist. Cotton lace's soft texture is a counterpoint to Pierce’s tailoring.

Previous collections drew from Irish history and femininity, exploring themes of resilience and fragility 

Traditional handmade crochet and 
pintucking are given new forms.
Photograph: Andrea Heinsohn 
Clusters of hand-stitched silk snowberries bloom along the bodices of dresses, inspired by the fleeting perfection of winter’s first frost. 

One gown, constructed entirely from embroidered spirals, evokes the swirling imprint of frost on a windowpane. In another, layers of soft cotton and translucent organza mimic the delicate, flaking edges of a withering petal.

The collection’s color palette is primarily composed of shades of white and blue. Smocked silk velvet, falls of French embroidery and Japanese cotton lace, created garments that look almost weightless. 

The interplay of transparency and opacity, such as sheer organza layered over densely ruffled skirts, further emphasized the duality of delicacy and strength that defines Pierce’s ethos.

Pierce’s process is as painstaking as it is avant-garde. Instead of hardware or fastenings in her garments, the designers prefers to rely on textile manipulation to construct shape and structure. This practice, rooted in Irish handcraft traditions, has become a defining element of her work. But rather than copying historical techniques, she reimagines them.

Interplays of transparency and opacity, like sheer organza layered over densely ruffled skirts, emphasized a duality of delicacy and strength 

Stephen Jones created whimsical
headpieces, including this one with
white cotton snowberries and bows.
Photograph: Andrea Heinsohn
In Nothing Pure Can Stay, Irish crochet, once a symbol of domestic labour, finds new expression in magnified lace motifs. Pintucks, an enduring signature in Pierce’s collections are combined with artisanal embroidery techniques.

Pierce’s commitment to innovation extends to her choice of materials. She sources deadstock fabrics from couture houses, ensuring that each piece is not only an artistic statement but also an act of preservation.

Italian silk, Japanese cotton lace, and French embroidery are all designed into new and unexpected forms, demonstrating that even the most traditional elements can be redefined.

This season, the designer also introduced several key collaborations for the collection. She worked with British milliner Stephen Jones, who created a series of snowberry hats to complement the dreamlike atmosphere of the garments. 

These headpieces, adorned with bows and delicate fabric berries, evoke a sense of childhood nostalgia and enchantment. With Jones, she creates a collection of dreamlike headpieces, halos and coronets of white cotton snowberries, ribbons looping into infinity. 

A petalled cap, topped with tiered bows, hovers between delicacy and surrealism, while playful ribbon ties flutter across the lips and eyes, adding an air of mystery. 

The designer's Irish crochet, lacework, and smocking not only honors traditional techniques but also reinterprets them for a modern audience 

French brand Polène collaborated
with Pierce to create this sphere-shaped
handbag. Photograph: Andrea Heinsohn
Meanwhile, Pierce’s collaboration with the French accessories brand Polène introduced a selection of sculptural handbags crafted in Ubrique, Spain. These leather bags, designed in geometric box and sphere silhouettes, mirror the intricate detailing of the Irish designer's garments, linking fashion and fine artisan works.

Nothing Pure Can Stay also demonstrates the enduring power of handmade craft in an industry dominated by mass production. Pierce’s Irish crochet, lacework, and smocking not only honors traditional techniques but also reinterprets them for a modern audience. 

The ambience of the Paris presentation at the Irish Embassy. was underscored by a carefully curated soundtrack by Simon Parris, blending instrumental, vocal, and spoken-word elements. 

Pierce’s own voice recited passages from Nabokov and Plath, interwoven with traditional Irish melodies sung by her mother. Layered with environmental sounds, rain against glass, the hush of wind through an open door, it becomes a meditation on memory and loss, underscoring the collection’s themes of fleeting beauty. This soundscape heightened the show’s emotional impact, creating a multisensory experience that reinforced its themes of memory and loss.

In an industry that often glorifies the fast and disposable, Róisín Pierce has managed to create something more lasting

Heirlooms in the making:
the designer aims to capture
something lasting in her 
white, gossamer creations.
Photograph; Elli Ioannou
Since founding her eponymous brand in 2020, Pierce has steadily gained recognition for her unique approach to design. Her attention to textile development and her commitment to slow, intentional creation have earned her accolades, including the Chanel Métiers d'Art award and a finalist position in the prestigious LVMH Prize. 

With this collection, Pierce continues to build upon her previous work while exploring different ideas and themes. Her exploration of temporality is an attempt to capture the intangible and hold it just a moment longer. Her gossamer gowns. some adorned with cascading tulle petals, linger in the mind.

At the heart of Nothing Pure Can Stay is the idea of legacy, not just in craft, but in the way we hold onto beauty as it slips through our hands. Pierce’s garments are heirlooms in the truest sense, not only in their painstaking construction but in their refusal to succumb to passing trends. 

The fingers that trace the embroidered forget-me-not motifs will one day still, the shoulders that bear feather-light tulle will eventually falter but the garment, with all its delicate strength, will endure. 

In an industry that often glorifies the fast and disposable, Róisín Pierce has managed to create something more lasting. Through her reverence for craft, poetic sensibility, and commitment to beauty, she reminds us that the act of creation ensures that memories can endure in other more tangible forms. 

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