Berlin Fashion Week Recap

From stunning exhibitions to thought-provoking panels, here's a rundown of our Berlin Fashion Week.

Panel Discussion: “Change the Rules of Fashion”

The highlight of the week was our panel discussion, "Change the Rules of Fashion," at the CSR.ART Gallery. We were honored to have industry trailblazers Ines Rust from DAWN Denim and Mathilde Charpail from SANE Standard share their insights on breaking the unspoken rules of the fashion industry.

Some of the unspoken rules we uncovered were:

  • the default of creating waste in the production
  • it is hard to change the system from within the system
  • the fashion industry runs on exploiting women
  • the default of always cutting cost to create a cheaper price

instead we see improvement in:

  • working with zero-waste designs and reducing the production waste
  • founding our own companies
  • supporting and building fair production conditions and supporting women
  • creating value over profit/price

In transition to the networking part we got to feature future panelists and their innovative work, which is challenging the rules of fashion: Chiengora, The LoopLook and The Crisps. Lukas played live techno during our get-together, studio and exhibition tour. Thank you to everyone involved!

DER BERLINER SALON at BODE MUSEUM

This year marked our debut at "DER BERLINER SALON," hosted at the majestic BODE MUSEUM. From July 3rd to 7th, the group exhibition, curated by Christiane Arp, showcased an array of innovative fashion pieces. The exhibition was open daily from 10 AM to 5 PM, with a special treat on Sunday, offering free entrance as part of "Museumssonntag." 

Exhibition at CSR.ART Gallery

We also had the privilege of presenting our work at the CSR.ART Gallery. This exhibition ran from Tuesday to Friday, displaying selected pieces from our new collection, Edition 4 and their zero-waste design patterns, alongside captivating photos by Cherie Birkner. Huge thanks to DEEDS News and ART@BERLIN for their collaboration.

 

„Nur Kleidungsstücke, die lange und gerne getragen werden, können nachhaltig sein.“