Monday, 3 February 2025

Berlin Fashion Week: The X-Factor ~ Haderlump's Exploration of the Art of Travel. Photography by Jay Zoo

Train travel was the inspiration for the new Haderlump collection by Johann Ehrhardt. Photograph by Jay Zoo

THE RHYTHMIC CLATTER OF WHEELS on tracks, the fleeting glances exchanged between strangers, the quiet solitude of a journey: Haderlump's Autumn/Winter 2025/26 collection, Solivagant, channels the spirit of mid-20th-century rail travel. Designed by Johann Ehrhardt, the collection explores the intersection of movement and human connection, portraying 28 distinct travelers whose stories unfold through the runway show in Berlin. 

Tailored outerwear dominates the lineup, with coats and blazers reimagined through the label’s evocative aesthetic. Accessories, including bags and suitcases, play a pivotal role in reinforcing the collection’s theme of transience. X-shaped silhouettes, a recurring motif, symbolize convergence: echoing the way railway lines and human paths intersect. Textile manipulation adds depth to the pieces, with wool and denim treated to reflect the wear and oxidation found in vintage train interiors. The color palette, dominated by black, gray, and blue with red accents, evokes the shifting tones of railway landscapes. 

Sustainability remains central to Haderlump's philosophy. The collection is produced in the brand’s Berlin atelier using deadstock fabrics and recycled materials. Transparency in sourcing and production is a key to the label's philosophy. With this new collection, Haderlump continues its exploration of fashion as a study of history, movement, and identity. By drawing from the past while embracing modern craftsmanship, the brand creates designs that are both functional pieces and narratives of transition and connection. ~ Antonio Visconti

Scroll down to see highlights of Haderlump's Autumn/Winter 2025 Collection













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Sunday, 2 February 2025

Paris Haute Couture: From Desert to Dreamscape ~ the Poetry of Yuima Nakazato’s New Collection

A golden creation made from hand-crafted glazed ceramic catches the light at Yuima Nakazato's haute couture presentation in Paris. Photograph above and masthead by Elli Ioannou for DAM 

For Yuima Nakazato's Spring/Summer 2025 haute couture collection in Paris, he turned his gaze to the vast and surreal White Desert of Egypt, a landscape where time is carved into the earth itself. Titled Fade, the Japanese designer's new work is a meditation on transformation, memory, and the passage of time, both in nature and within the urban landscapes of the future, writes Jeanne-Marie Cilento. Photography by Elli Ioannou and Andrea Heinsohn

A dramatic, crocheted design
at the Paris SS25 show.
Photograph: Andrea Heinsohn
WITH an atmospheric soundscape of wind and waves and a golden sand dune at the heart of the runway, Yuima Nakazato's presentation of his new collection was an immersive experience that took the audience into another world, far away from the hurly burly of Paris outside.

Drawing inspiration from his travels to Sahara el Beyda, where colossal chalk formations stand like frozen waves sculpted by millennia of wind. Nakazato sought to merge the ephemeral and the eternal in his new designs, to embody the idea of weathering, how materials, ideas, and histories fade, dissolve, and are reborn. 

Once submerged beneath an ancient ocean, this vast expanse of chalky rock formations tells a story that spans millions of years. Towering natural sculptures, shaped by relentless wind and sand, stand as ghostly sentinels of a forgotten seabed.

"The collection was inspired by my travel to the Sahara Desert where I did a shoot and we got lost on the trip," the designer explained in an interview after the Paris show. Amid the phantasmagoric terrain, Nakazato confronted the idea of impermanence. He imagined the layers of history embedded in these rock formations, silent testimony to the forces of nature. 

But inspiration struck not only in the stark beauty of the landscape; it emerged from Nakazato’s car losing the way in the desert, drifting through an abyss of darkness without GPS, reality and imagination began to blur. Memories, myths, and fleeting visions fused into a single, overwhelming experience.

The collection translates abstract ideas into vividly rendered couture, merging poetry, craftsmanship and innovation to create designs that feel unearthed from a dreamscape

A hand-crafted creation worn with 
Nakazato's sculptural jewellery.
Photograph: Elli Ioannou
"All night we travelled in the car and couldn't find our way, but I let my imagination merge with what was happening," he said. "We drove for hours and while I was sitting in the back, covered in dust, my mind went to the ancient Japanese myth of the giant creature Namazu who lives under the earth.

"The desert, shifting and morphing under the night sky, felt like a living entity, an echo of this legend. What if the landscape itself was breathing? What if the White Desert was not only a relic of the past but a premonition of the future?  I thought that seeing how today's weather can transform our environment the desert might be foreshadowing the future of cities like Tokyo." 

The title Fade encapsulates Nakazato’s contemplation of gradual disappearance: of landforms shaped by time, of cities transformed by climate change, of personal memories dissolving like sand in the wind. The collection translates these abstract ideas into vividly rendered couture, merging poetry, craftsmanship with innovation to create designs that feel unearthed from a dreamscape.

Nakazato has long been known for his innovative approach to couture, often weaving together avant-garde materials and new technology. This season, however, marked a distinct evolution. The emphasis was no longer solely on the technical, but on the human: a meditation on the erosion of time, the fading of memories, and the delicate balance between the present and future. The designer’s experience of getting lost in the desert, cut off from the digital world, became an allegory for the disorientation of modernity where big cities feel as transient as shifting sands.

This season the emphasis was no longer solely on the technical, but on the human: a meditation on the erosion of time, the fading of memories, and the delicate balance between the present and future

Designer Yuima Nakazato puts his
glimmering design on a model
during his show in Paris.
Photograph; Elli Ioannou
The collection's diaphanous, layered silhouettes in shades of ivory and sand, evoke the attrition of desert rock formations. Voluminous tunics and draped coats, crafted from gossamer-thin fabrics, move like ever shifting dunes. Long, flowing capes feature delicate, hand-painted motifs reminiscent of wind-sculpted landscapes. Intricate pleating and deconstructed kimono elements create a sense of movement and impermanence.

The hand-crocheted pieces seem like organic structures shaped by unseen forces. The standout piece of the collection (at left) is an all-ceramic golden dress, which needed more than a thousand hours of work, each of its two thousand ceramic components individually crafted, glazed, and threaded by hand: a testament to the Nakazato's’s unwavering dedication to couture as an art form.

"The golden ceramic dress I made that is not going to ‘fade' ~ it is going to exist for 10,000 years,' Nakazato said. "But other textiles will disappear with a much shorter life. So the comparison with a long life and a shorter one is what I am trying to show together.  This is what I really wanted to do this season."

Throughout the collection, colours deepen into ochres, charcoals, and oxidized metallics, reflecting the desert at twilight. A striking structured jacket, embroidered with ceramic shards, captures the tension between fragility and endurance. Capacious trousers with sculptural folds mirror the mushroom-like rock formations Nakazato encountered in the White Desert. A series of sheer, iridescent gowns, woven on vintage kimono looms, shimmer like mirages, their surfaces shifting under the runway lights.

Sustainability remains central to Nakazato’s vision and this collection incorporates upcycled textiles from Africa, transformed, regenerated and rewoven into new forms. 

Voluminous fabrics connected the collection
to the traditional clothes worn in the Sahara.
Photograph: Elli Ioannou
Sustainability remains central to Nakazato’s vision. The collection incorporates upcycled textiles recovered from Africa, transformed through a process, which allows fibres to be regenerated and rewoven into new forms. Handcraft remains at the core, with pieces like the intricate crochet ensemble requiring some five hundred hours of meticulous work. 

Textile innovation, a cornerstone of Nakazato’s work, reached new heights. The collection employed vintage looms from Japanese kimono-making traditions, while experimental fabrics integrated both ancient craftsmanship and futuristic materials. Spiber Inc.'s Brewed Protein™ fibres, derived from sustainable bioengineering, were seamlessly blended with traditional Japanese lacquer techniques. Digital printing and AI-enhanced photo processing allowed for designs that felt simultaneously ancient and avant-garde: a visual language where past and present coalesced.

Since debuting at Paris Haute Couture Week as an official guest designer in 2016, Yuima Nakazato has pushed the boundaries of fashion. Beyond the runway, Nakazato has left a mark in other creative fields. In 2024, the Cité de la Dentelle et de la Mode in Calais, France, dedicated its first monographic exhibition to his work: Yuima Nakazato: Beyond Couture. Also last year, his documentary film Dust to Dust won the Human/Nature Award, a prize for those offering solutions to environmental crises. It premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York. Nakazato's costume designs have been highlights of productions at the Boston Ballet and the Geneva National Theatre, further demonstrating his ability to translate his aesthetic across disciplines.

Shimmering like mirages, iridescent
designs were made on vintage Kimono looms
Photograph: Andrea Heinsohn
With the new collection Fade, Yuima Nakazato has ushered in another era not just for his own label, but for couture itself. In a world increasingly defined by rapid change, his collection serves as both a reflection and a warning. 

It asks us to consider what is vanishing before our eyes and what might be reclaimed. A vision where nature and technology, memory and innovation merge into a singular, poetic expression of couture. The shimmering, ceramic-embellished gold creation, left the audience with a lingering impression, one not just of beauty, but of something deeper, more profound. 

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Thursday, 30 January 2025

The Fire and the Phoenix: Gaurav Gupta’s Fashion Resurrection at Paris Haute Couture Week

Like the flames of a burning orange fire, this gown was a highlight of Gaurav Gupta's couture collection in Paris. Photograph and masthead cover by Elli Ioannou for DAM
More than a fashion show, Gaurav Gupta’s Spring/Summer 2025 couture collection, Across the Flame, was a personal reflection on resilience, transformation, and the power of healing. Inspired by a near-fatal accident that profoundly altered his life, Gupta channeled his experience into a collection that fused spirituality, sculptural artistry, and innovative craftsmanship, writes Antonio Visconti.  Photography by Elli Ioannou and Andrea Heinsohn

Poet Navkirat Sodhi and designer
Gaurav Gupta at his Paris show.
Photograph: Andrea Heinsohn
GAURAV Gupta's new collection, presented at Paris Haute Couture Week, blurred the boundaries between fashion and emotional catharsis, illustrating the couturier’s journey through pain, survival, and rebirth.

The Indian couturier's latest work was inspired by the traumatic fire he and his partner, poet and performer Navkirat Sodhi, endured last year in Delhi. The accident, which left Sodhi with severe burns and required multiple surgeries, led both of them on a transformative spiritual journey. This experience became the foundation of Across the Flame, where themes of survival and transcendence were woven into each design.

From the moment the show opened, it was evident that this was no ordinary couture collection. Sodhi, walking barefoot and reciting a poem about their shared ordeal, set the tone for a presentation steeped in raw emotion. And the burning red scars from the fire were visible on her legs and arms beneath a diaphanous gown. 

Her presence, unguarded and powerful, reinforced the underlying narrative of resilience, while the atmospheric sound of tabla drums and a live sound bath deepened the sense of transcendence.

Gupta’s mastery of sculptural drapery took on new meaning in this collection. His signature structured silhouettes were amplified, evoking images of rising flames and celestial energy. The Twin Flame ensemble, a standout piece in ochre silk, wrapped around two identical models, symbolizing the unbreakable bond between Gupta and Sodhi. This use of duality was a recurring motif throughout the collection, representing the interplay between destruction and renewal.

Gaurav Gupta's latest work was inspired by the traumatic fire he and his life partner, poet and performer Navkirat Sodhi, endured last year

The glistening Twin Flame ensemble
symbolized the unbreakable bond 
between Sodhi and Gupta.
Photograph: Elli Ioannou
Another striking design was a gold jacquard ensemble featuring Sanskrit chants woven directly into the fabric. The text, which also appeared on a model’s face, embodied the mantras that guided Gupta and Sodhi through their healing process. 

The introduction of brocade, handwoven in Banaras, reinforced the connection to tradition, while innovative textile techniques elevated the collection beyond conventional couture.

Expanding on his previous explorations with metal casting, Gupta introduced sculptural breastplates in midnight blue. These pieces, reminiscent of armor, represented both vulnerability and protection.

 A lacquered half-mask, partially obscuring a model’s face, reinforced the notion of survival as both a physical and psychological battle. The interplay between fluid draping and rigid metallic elements created a compelling contrast, highlighting the duality of strength and fragility.

Gupta’s fearless approach to couture was further evident in his incorporation of denim: a first for his house. The Bucket Corset and Distressed Bucket Jacket challenged traditional notions of high fashion, demonstrating that even the most utilitarian fabrics can carry deep artistic significance. The pale blue denim bodices, sculpted with the same precision as his signature gowns, symbolized reinvention and the breaking of creative barriers.

An evocative midnight blue sculptural 
breastplate contrasted with the
dramatic silken draping.
Photograph: Andrea Heinsohn 
Embellishments also played a critical role in adding depth and texture to the collection. Gupta employed intricate embroidery techniques, incorporating raffia, micro pearls, and ghungroo: tiny metallic bells traditionally used in Indian dance. 

These elements, used to accentuate movement and sound, reinforced the performative and meditative aspects of the show.

Jewelry pieces from the collection echoed the themes of transformation and protection. Designs such as the Chakra EarringInfinity Ear Cuff, and Bahu Mudra Ring served as talismans, embodying the spiritual evolution that defined Gupta’s journey. 

The Tusk and Gaja Earring, inspired by mythological symbolism, further cemented the collection’s connection to cosmic energy and rebirth.

Beyond its aesthetic achievements, Across the Flame carried a powerful message of advocacy. By placing Sodhi at the forefront and embracing the visibility of her scars, Gupta used his platform to shed light on burn survivors and acid attack victims. In doing so, he transformed couture into a medium for social awareness, proving that fashion can be both visually striking and profoundly meaningful.

Through sculptural silhouettes, symbolic designs, and his commitment to storytelling, Gupta created a collection that transcended fashion to become a testament to survival, love, and renewal

The scintillating, silvery Astral Body
 gown that closed the Paris show.
Photograph: Elli Ioannou 
Closing Gaurav Gupta's Paris show was an astonishing crystallized gown with tiny, glittering sequins adorning the face and neck of the model. Gleaming and shimmering in the cavernous light, the silvery torso and head contrasted with a beautifully draped black skirt.

The designer has long been known for pushing the boundaries of couture, however this new collection marked a different chapter in his career, one that was as introspective as it was artistically ambitious. 

Through sculptural silhouettes, symbolic designs, and his commitment to storytelling, Gupta created a collection that transcended fashion to become a testament to survival, love, and renewal.

In an industry that often prioritizes spectacle over substance, Gupta’s presentation stood apart. By transforming personal tragedy into a visionary runway experience, he reaffirmed his place as one of couture’s most fearless voices. 

The show was not just about clothes, it was about the indomitable spirit of those who rise from the ashes, stronger than before. 

Scroll down to see more highlights from Gaurav Gupta's SS25 haute couture collection in Paris

Gaurav Gupta, Across the Flame, Paris Haute Couture, Spring/Summer 2025. Photograph: Elli Ioannou
Gaurav Gupta, Across the Flame, Paris Haute Couture, Spring/Summer 2025. Photograph: Elli Ioannou
Gaurav Gupta, Across the Flame, Paris Haute Couture, Spring/Summer 2025. Photograph: Elli Ioannou

Gaurav Gupta, Across the Flame, Paris Haute Couture, Spring/Summer 2025. Photograph: Elli Ioannou
Gaurav Gupta, Across the Flame, Paris Haute Couture, Spring/Summer 2025. Photograph: Andrea Heinsohn

Gaurav Gupta, Across the Flame, Paris Haute Couture, Spring/Summer 2025. Photograph: Andrea Heinsohn

Gaurav Gupta, Across the Flame, Paris Haute Couture, Spring/Summer 2025. Photograph: Andrea Heinsohn

Gaurav Gupta, Across the Flame, Paris Haute Couture, Spring/Summer 2025. Photograph: Andrea Heinsohn

Gaurav Gupta, Across the Flame, Paris Haute Couture, Spring/Summer 2025. Photograph: Andrea Heinsohn

Gaurav Gupta, Across the Flame, Paris Haute Couture, Spring/Summer 2025. Photograph: Andrea Heinsohn

Gaurav Gupta, Across the Flame, Paris Haute Couture, Spring/Summer 2025. Photograph: Elli Ioannou

Gaurav Gupta, Across the Flame, Paris Haute Couture, Spring/Summer 2025. Photograph: Elli Ioannou

Gaurav Gupta, Across the Flame, Paris Haute Couture, Spring/Summer 2025. Photograph: Elli Ioannou

Gaurav Gupta, Across the Flame, Paris Haute Couture, Spring/Summer 2025. Photograph: Elli Ioannou

Gaurav Gupta, Across the Flame, Paris Haute Couture, Spring/Summer 2025. Photograph: Elli Ioannou

Gaurav Gupta, Across the Flame, Paris Haute Couture, Spring/Summer 2025. Photograph: Elli Ioannou

Gaurav Gupta, Across the Flame, Paris Haute Couture, Spring/Summer 2025. Photograph: Elli Ioannou
Gaurav Gupta, Across the Flame, Paris Haute Couture, Spring/Summer 2025. Photograph: Andrea Heinsohn
Gaurav Gupta, Across the Flame, Paris Haute Couture, Spring/Summer 2025. Photograph: Andrea Heinsohn

Gaurav Gupta, Across the Flame, Paris Haute Couture, Spring/Summer 2025. Photograph: Elli Ioannou

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Wednesday, 29 January 2025

Paris Haute Couture Week: African Textiles Take Centre Stage in Imane Ayissi’s Spring/Summer 2025 Collection

A highlight of Imane Ayissi's new collection in Paris was this brightly hued gown with raffia embellishments. 
Imane Ayissi’s Spring/Summer 2025 collection, unveiled during Paris Haute Couture Week, is a testament to the power of fabric as both a medium and a message. Weaving African heritage with an eclectic mix of cultural influences, he presented a vivid array of designs that celebrated tradition while embracing innovation. From intricately crafted gowns to strikingly tailored pieces, the Cameroon-born designer offered a vibrant exploration of history and the art of couture, writes Isabella Lancellotti. Photography by Andrea Heinsohn

Brilliant colour and pattern
were cleverly combined to
create a soigne collection.
THIS SEASON, Imane Ayissi explored the cultural and symbolic significance of textiles, merging ancestral African craftsmanship with modern silhouettes. The result was a rich dialogue between past and present, tradition and modernity. The show was held in the opulent 19th salons of the Galerie Bourbon, once the home of Princess Marie Isabelle d'Orleans y Borbon, in Paris' tony 16th arrondissement.

Contrasting with these sumptuous surroundings was the designer's use of modest African materials, such as Kente cloth and raffia, yet elevating them to haute couture. Kente, a vibrant woven fabric with cultural roots in Ghana, was transformed into flowing halter dresses and structured kimono-inspired jackets. 

Meanwhile, raffia, a material Ayissi has long championed, appeared in bold hues of fuchsia and scarlet, adding texture and drama to fringed capes and oversized bows. These traditional elements were juxtaposed with luxurious satins and taffetas, highlighting Ayissi’s mastery of combining contrasting materials.

The new collection featured a series of standout looks that captured Ayissi’s ability to balance opulence with restraint. A brilliant pink bustier with a beautifully draped, patterned skirt, a soigne black gown with a well-fitted, long bodice suggested glamour and understated luxury, while a voluminous white gown with cascading folds showcased his talent for sculptural design. One particularly striking piece, a top made of interlocking floral appliqués (see above), demonstrated the intricate craftsmanship that defines his work.

The designer drew on African materials, such as Kente cloth and raffia, elevating them to haute couture

Raffia is one of the modest materials 
that has become a signature of Ayissi
 and central to his haute couture design
 
Ayissi also paid homage to African fashion history by reinterpreting the kaba dress, a garment with a complex colonial past. Originally imposed by European colonizers to cover African women’s bodies, the kaba has since evolved into a symbol of empowerment and cultural identity.

Ayissi’s modern take on the kaba incorporated elements of global fashion, drawing parallels with Asian kimonos, Korean hanbok, and European gowns from the 18th and early 20th centuries. This cross-cultural approach underscored the universality of design and the shared threads that connect seemingly disparate traditions.

"The starting point for this collection was my desire to revisit two key wardrobe items worn on the African continent: the boubou worn by men and women in most West and Central African countries. And the Kaba, a loose dress originally imposed on African women by European colonizers in the 19th century to cover their bodies and shapes and which became a kind of national clothing in Cameroon," explained the designer. 

Ayissi aimed to make the collection more than just a showcase of beautiful designs; it was a thoughtful exploration of the intersections between cultures. "It is these links, these relationships between elements of apparently extremely different cultures that fascinate me." the designer said. "So, I thought of this collection as a journey between Asia, Africa and Paris through time." This ethos was evident in his use of structural techniques inspired by Parisian couture, such as cinched waists reminiscent of Dior’s New Look, and draping that echoed the work of Jeanne Lanvin in the 1930s.

Ayissi’s modern take on the kaba melded Asian kimonos, Korean hanbok, and European gowns from the 18th and early 20th centuries.

Jpanese kimonos were one 
of the many inspirations for
Ayissi's latest collection
One of the collection’s most unique elements was Ayissi working with Chinese painter Wang Ying. Known for blending traditional Chinese techniques with Impressionist influences, Ying contributed hand-painted prints on silk and eco-friendly bamboo-based fabrics. These designs added a poetic layer to Ayissi’s collection, further reinforcing the narrative.

"This collection also involves the collaboration that I established with the painter Wang Ying, who is also a diplomat and who paints Parisian landscapes with a technique that relates to traditional Chinese painting but also impressionism," Ayissi said. "Wang Ying has produced prints on silk and new ecological fabrics based on Bamboo, but also paintings on fabric."

Ayissi’s journey from Cameroon to the pinnacle of Parisian fashion is quite an extraordinary tale itself. Born into a family of artists and athletes, he began his career as a dancer with the Ballet National du Cameroun before becoming involved with fashion. After moving to Paris in the early 1990s, he worked as a model for some of the world’s most prestigious fashion houses, including Dior, Lanvin, and Givenchy. This experience gave him a unique perspective on the industry and fueled his passion for haute couture.

In 2020, Ayissi made history as the first Sub-Saharan designer invited to show on the official Paris Haute Couture schedule. His inclusion in the Fédération de la Haute Couture et de la Mode marked a significant milestone, not just for him but for African fashion as a whole. Ayissi’s work challenges stereotypes and demonstrates that haute couture is not confined to European traditions.

Imane Ayissi’s latest collection is a powerful reminder of fashion’s potential to transcend borders and celebrate differences

Designer Imane Ayissi takes his bow after his show in Paris
Ayissi’s latest collection is a powerful reminder of fashion’s potential to transcend borders and celebrate differences. By blending African techniques with contemporary design, he has created a body of work that feels both timeless and of the moment. His emphasis on sustainability, using eco-friendly fabrics and honoring artisanal craftsmanship, further positions him as a leader in the industry.

As the Paris show concluded, it was clear that Ayissi is not just designing clothes; he is crafting stories. Each piece in his collection is a chapter in a larger narrative about identity, heritage, and the interconnectedness of cultures. In an industry often criticized for its lack of inclusivity, Ayissi’s work stands as a beacon of progress and possibility. With this collection, Imane Ayissi has once again proven that couture is more than just a display of refined skill but a medium for dialogue, a celebration of our differences, and, above all, an art form that can unite us all.

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