7.6 C
Munich
星期五, 24 10 月, 2025

PH5 Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

Must read

Filmmaker Nia DaCosta on a ‘Hedda Gabler’ for This Moment

Vogue: I confess I didn’t know anything about Hedda Gabler before seeing this.Nia DaCosta: That’s such a good way to go into it. If...

A Superfine Farewell: As It Comes to a Close, Look Back at the 2025 Met Costume Exhibition

Historically important, meticulously detailed, and culturally relevant are just some of the adjectives describing this year’s outgoing Costume Institute exhibition, “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style.”...

42 Best Shearling Jackets & Coats—Faux, Fleece & Teddy—to Bundle Up In

All products featured on Vogue are independently selected by our editors. However, we may earn affiliate revenue on this article and commission when you...

The Boy and the Bubble: Nicklas Skovgaard Wins Danish Fashion’s Biggest Prize

Skovgaard has attracted attention from all corners since launching his line in 2020. A fashion-obsessed boy who grew up in a small and remote...

PH5’s Zoe Champion and Wei Lin apply the same exactitude to the conceptualization of their collections as to the production of their no-waste programmed knits. Going into spring knowing they wouldn’t be staging a show allowed the colleagues to take a breath and let some light stream in, said Champion on a call. The designer didn’t mean this only metaphorically; she’s moved apartments, become “a first-time plant mom,” and spent months tracking the movement of light in her new digs in order to position her greenery in a way most conducive to growth. “The collection is really inspired by the shadows that are created by plants in your home,” she said, “or when you’re out in a park and lying under a tree and these beautiful shadows will slowly move over you and you take the time to appreciate that.”

Many of the patterns, some of which looked like cyanotypes, were developed from Champion’s photographs. The slanting beams of light they captured were translated elsewhere into neater horizontal bandage dresses. The brand’s UV-reactive yarns were back and used for the first time as solids. Patterned dresses made of this material are intended to be interactive. “You can actually create prints yourself in real time outside,” explained Champion. Depending on how the light hits you, different aspects of the hidden patterns will be revealed.

Each season the duo tries to expand their offering; they need to do that in a way that has impact. Showing a single solid dress with ties felt like an oversight, not the introduction of a new category. The addition of hand-crocheted flowers, intended to create a contrast between 3D and 2D representations of plants, felt cutesy rather than chic. Also new this season was a fascinating soft-relief knit technique resembling an etching (see Look 7) that, had it been used tonally, would have been the most subtle way the team could have achieved their goal of celebrating “nature’s quiet beauty.”

#PH5 #Spring #ReadytoWear #Collection

- Advertisement -

More articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisement -

Latest article

Filmmaker Nia DaCosta on a ‘Hedda Gabler’ for This Moment

Vogue: I confess I didn’t know anything about Hedda Gabler before seeing this.Nia DaCosta: That’s such a good way to go into it. If...

A Superfine Farewell: As It Comes to a Close, Look Back at the 2025 Met Costume Exhibition

Historically important, meticulously detailed, and culturally relevant are just some of the adjectives describing this year’s outgoing Costume Institute exhibition, “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style.”...

42 Best Shearling Jackets & Coats—Faux, Fleece & Teddy—to Bundle Up In

All products featured on Vogue are independently selected by our editors. However, we may earn affiliate revenue on this article and commission when you...

The Boy and the Bubble: Nicklas Skovgaard Wins Danish Fashion’s Biggest Prize

Skovgaard has attracted attention from all corners since launching his line in 2020. A fashion-obsessed boy who grew up in a small and remote...

Anne Hathaway’s ’70s Flared Jeans and Classic Sneakers Make a Perfect Fall Fit

Anne Hathaway has been spending time in Italy, where filming is underway on The Devil Wears Prada 2, and she’s wearing neither a lumpy...