Aspects of Love. Horror Vacui SS25

Munich-based Horror Vacui started out in 2012 as a brand selling vibrant sleeping gowns (for day and night), airy tops and oversized shirt-dresses in patterned silks and crisp Egyptian cottons. More than a decade in the business, the brand now offers an entire wardrobe, aesthetically rooted in Anna Heinrichs‘ vintage obsessions. Her spring-summer 2025 collection, shown during Berlin Fashion Week, is dedicated to all aspects of love, especially that of her mother and father who have both passed away within a year. The show opened with two looks in all-over black, which is an absolute rarity in the colorful world of the label. But the designs that followed made it clear that the beauty of her parents’ story was the focus rather than mourning. Translated from Latin, Horror Vacui describes a fear of emptiness, however this 10th anniversary collection was not barren or deflated, but full of love. The craftsmanship of Heinrichs’s honeycomb smocking, Froschgoscherl pleating, and the brand’s signature wavy trims are stunning. These are arts that have been passed down through generations and, too, are bound together by love. The designer upheld her sustainable approach to the collection, which, as always, was produced exclusively with Liberty of London fabrics, only this season she only used remnants from the last 10 years. One quilted patchwork design was even made from 100 different fabrics. When asked whether the numerous hearts running through many of the designs were not too obvious for such a conceptual collection, Heinrichs replied: “Yes, it’s quite naive. But that’s me. I like it when people smile. I don’t want to be cool, I want my fashion to evoke memories. Be they of family members, your own childhood, or just a beautiful moment in life.”

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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Lived In Americana. Coach Resort 2025

I never really cared about what’s going on at Coach, but the resort 2025 lookbook has sparked my interest. Finally, a brand in New York that fills the blank space that Raf Simons left after creating the ambitious – and sadly aborted – Calvin Klein 205W39NYC project. Stuart Vevers similarly plays with the codes of Americana in a loveworn, weathered, and lived in way, with bits of cinematic, even horror-y drama. Vevers’s rather winter-ish resort collection is stuffed nostalgia-tinged fuzzy-soft cozy cable knits and full tweedy skirts with huge taffeta bows, rocking a Victoriana-goes-1950s vibe. Note how the oversized Argyle check knit polo shirts are designed to layer up at will, one of the many pieces in Vevers’ line-up denuded of gender specificity. Likewise the jewelry: diamanté bows and chandelier earrings to pin here, there, and everywhere, and single earrings with a delightfully kitschy quality to them – pumpkins, candy canes, essentially the John Waters-approved inventory of holiday tree decorations. For layering up with those sweaters Vevers suggests a ratty tee emblazoned with Popeye; it was inspired by a black and white image of Debbie Harry back in the day wearing a t-shirt with the pipe smoking, spinach loving cartoon character. Popeye isn’t the only pop cultural icon in play here as the designer was also looking at images of Twin Peaks stars Madchen Amick and Lara Flynn Boyle between takes, in their homespun, 1950s-esque looks warped by David Lynch.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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