Iris Van Herpen Fall 2025 Couture Runway, Fashion Show & Collection Review


Iris Van Herpen has taken her haute couture R&D to another astonishing frontier, creating a “living look” incorporating 125 million bioluminescent algae that she said require eight hours of rest, eight hours of light — and a calm, cool environment in order to thrive.

Sounds a lot like us, huh?

“When it’s happy, it responds to the movement of the person who’s wearing it,” Van Herpen told a visitor, his jaw on the floor, during a preview of her fall 2025 show, which combined light sculptures, stirring music, gossamer fabrics and choreography to pack an emotional punch akin to David Attenborough’s new ocean film — but with the visual poetry unique to the Dutch designer.

A million questions occur about the algae dress, such as, “How long will it live?”

“We don’t know. No one knows. It’s one big pioneering process,” Van Herpen said. “But I don’t think this will be possible to deliver to a client yet. It’s more of a museum piece because it really needs to be taken care of every day.”

Van Herpen fished out a photo on her phone of the squishy garment housed in its steel and glass temperature-controlled chamber, mist accumulating at the bottom. It’s as strangely beautiful as it is mysterious, achieved thanks to a collaboration with engineer and “bio designer” Chris Bellamy, who found a way to keep the algae alive in a nutrient gel.

Each of Van Herpen’s 18 looks felt like an ecosystem unto itself: here a kinetic dress in collaboration with artist Casey Curran, undulating like some alien skeleton; there Japanese “air” fabric suspended on wires and drifting like a jellyfish in invisible currents, or a cutting-edge “brewed protein” material from Spiber, somehow resembling the suckers of an octopus — or a few cans of Pringles — spilled over a fishtail dress.

The designer combined all that science with haute artistry, also taking inspiration from Loïe Fuller, a pioneer of modern dance, and equipping a performer with winged appendages that interacted with the laser beams of Nick Verstand in mesmerizing ways. Van Herpen called that show opener a metaphor for “how we have drained the life out of our oceans.”

Leaving no senses unengaged, she also conscripted perfumer Francis Kurkdjian to develop a bespoke fragrance dispersed like a wave during the show.

Here were vaporous dresses that behaved in the atmosphere of the Élysée Montmartre music hall like normal fabric might submerged in Europe’s deepest pool — Van Herpen’s been there, done that for her spring 2023 couture collection — and a stiffer one that whorled upwards around a model, like egg whites caught in a twister.

Van Herpen’s wondrous dressmaking defies gravity, provokes deep thoughts about our planet — and lights up couture week like very, very happy algae.



#Iris #Van #Herpen #Fall #Couture #Runway #Fashion #Show #Collection #Review

Related Posts

Nicole Miller Strikes Deal with Tycoon Enterprises for Licensing Program in Mexico and Latin America

Nicole Miller is expanding its brand to Mexico and Latin America. The company has signed a new agent relationship with Tycoon Enterprises, founded in Mexico, to launch the Nicole Miller…

032c Spring 2026 Menswear Collection

Maria Koch has been on a health kick. She’s not alone—everywhere you look these days there’s a wellness tip awaiting. “I feel like I’m the last to the party, but…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *