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Walter Van Beirendonck

Walter Van Beirendonck is a Belgian fashion designer known for his bold, avant-garde menswear that fuses vibrant colors, surreal graphics, and subversive social commentary.

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Walter Van Beirendonck Fall/Winter 2025

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Audra

Audra Noyes Herndon, the creative force behind the womenswear label AUDRA, emerged from the rigorous ateliers of Paris—trained under Alber Elbaz at Lanvin and later John Galliano—to forge a voice all her own. A graduate of Savannah College of Art and Design, she made her debut in 2013, infusing her cut-and-sew practice with memories of her late father and a deep respect for refined tailoring. Her designs are quietly powerful: blending the structured precision of menswear with a feminine lyricality that feels both earnest and elegant. Her aesthetic—expressive, poetic, ageless—has resulted in collections that resist the ephemeral, instead offering wardrobe staples built to last in both material and relevance.

Since launch, AUDRA has steadily claimed its space in the luxury ready-to-wear market, not by loud gestures, but through unwavering craftsmanship, thoughtful sourcing, and a commitment to making pieces that are as versatile as they are evocative. Fabrics are selected from small-batch mills in Europe and Japan; much of the manufacturing done in the U.S., often in female-owned factories. The brand operates at the intersection of modesty and allure, creating designs that are playful yet poised, flattering yet restrained. Worn by cultural figures and featured regularly in the pages of top fashion titles, AUDRA is more than a label—it is a testament to what happens when creative discipline meets personal narrative.

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Camilla and Marc

Australian label Camilla and Marc has built its reputation on a quiet, assured sophistication that feels both modern and timeless. Known for clean tailoring, architectural silhouettes, and a refined color palette, the brand offers wardrobe staples that never shout but always command attention. There is an ease to their pieces—soft suiting, fluid dresses, and elevated separates—that captures a distinctly Antipodean sensibility: chic without being precious, polished without being overworked. It is luxury stripped back to its essentials, allowing the wearer to feel effortlessly powerful.

Each collection feels like an exercise in restraint, yet always with a whisper of drama. Camilla and Marc excel at balancing sharp, minimalist structure with a sense of softness—whether through sculptural draping, subtle cutouts, or directional layering. Their recent work leans into a kind of urbane sensuality, offering versatile pieces that move seamlessly from day to evening. The result is a wardrobe for the intelligent dresser, one who values precision and longevity over fleeting trends, but still craves that spark of contemporary relevance.

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Schiaparelli

Few names in fashion carry the mythic weight of Elsa Schiaparelli, the Italian-born designer who, in the interwar years, turned Paris into her canvas and made fashion a true art form. Opening her couture house in 1927, Schiaparelli quickly distinguished herself with her wit, surrealist collaborations, and fearless experimentation. Her friendships with Salvador Dalí, Jean Cocteau, and Man Ray resulted in some of the most iconic pieces of the 20th century—think the Lobster Dress, the Shoe Hat, and the Skeleton Dress. She introduced innovations we now take for granted: visible zippers as embellishment, trompe-l’œil sweaters, and that shocking, electric pink that would become her signature.

Her house closed in 1954, but the legend never faded. Today, under the creative direction of Daniel Roseberry, Schiaparelli’s spirit is alive in collections that reimagine her avant-garde codes for a new generation. The exaggerated silhouettes, gilded embroidery, and sculptural bijoux nod to her surrealist past while speaking to a modern, red-carpet world. In an industry often driven by minimalism and commerciality, Schiaparelli remains the house that celebrates fashion as fantasy—an unapologetic reminder that clothing can still surprise, seduce, and provoke.

Image by Fleur Kaan

Pringle of Scotland

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Image by Ruta Gudeliene
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Linder

Linder is a New York–based fashion brand founded in 2013 by Sam Linder and Kirk Millar, known for its conceptual, gender-defying approach to menswear and ready-to-wear design. The label blends experimental tailoring with romantic, avant-garde influences, creating garments that reimagine traditional silhouettes through unexpected proportions, material juxtapositions, and decorative yet functional details.

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