Designer Peter Do crafted a system of dressing that acknowledges humans’ conflicting desires for safety and self-expression.

1 of 51
Helmut Lang

2 of 51
Helmut Lang

3 of 51
Helmut Lang

4 of 51
Helmut Lang

5 of 51
Helmut Lang

6 of 51
Helmut Lang

7 of 51
Helmut Lang

8 of 51
Helmut Lang

9 of 51
Helmut Lang

10 of 51
Helmut Lang

11 of 51
Helmut Lang

12 of 51
Helmut Lang

13 of 51
Helmut Lang

14 of 51
Helmut Lang

15 of 51
Helmut Lang

16 of 51
Helmut Lang

17 of 51
Helmut Lang

18 of 51
Helmut Lang

19 of 51
Helmut Lang

20 of 51
Helmut Lang

21 of 51
Helmut Lang

22 of 51
Helmut Lang

23 of 51
Helmut Lang

24 of 51
Helmut Lang

25 of 51
Helmut Lang

26 of 51
Helmut Lang

27 of 51
Helmut Lang

28 of 51
Helmut Lang

29 of 51
Helmut Lang

30 of 51
Helmut Lang

31 of 51
Helmut Lang

32 of 51
Helmut Lang

33 of 51
Helmut Lang

34 of 51
Helmut Lang

35 of 51
Helmut Lang

36 of 51
Helmut Lang

37 of 51
Helmut Lang

38 of 51
Helmut Lang

39 of 51
Helmut Lang

40 of 51
Helmut Lang

41 of 51
Helmut Lang

42 of 51
Helmut Lang

43 of 51
Helmut Lang

44 of 51
Helmut Lang

45 of 51
Helmut Lang

46 of 51
Helmut Lang

47 of 51
Helmut Lang

48 of 51
Helmut Lang

49 of 51
Helmut Lang

50 of 51
Helmut Lang

51 of 51
Helmut Lang
In a society riddled with uncertainty and chaos, Helmut Lang provides order and refuge.
“We see the way you look on the streets, looking at your watch, thinking it’s time to go home,” the brand’s Fall/Winter 2024 collection notes read. “Your hands going up to your head, pulling your hood down tight. We see your fingers splayed and searching, reaching for pockets and high collars and systems that aren’t there.” For Fall/Winter 2024, creative director Peter Do constructed that missing system: a wardrobe that works together to make safety the priority, without sacrificing character.
Titled “Protection vs. Projection,” the collection possesses those lacking defensive mechanisms — face shields, cocooning zippers, waterproof hoods and bulletproof materials. Because the truth is: in today’s world, you never know when you might need them.
Vests, bomber jackets and trousers are made with a new silk bubble-wrap textile that includes bulletproof reinforcements. Wool coats and padded nylon puffers employ precautionary head coverings that, as Do notes in a lighthearted bullet point, “don’t mess up hair.” Knitwear is filled with padding, much like that of an astronaut suit. It’s hyper-adaptable and ultra-protective.
Cashmere sweaters, hoodies and pants utilize zippers to “constrict” and “reveal” the human form. Formalwear similarly contours models’ silhouettes with pressurized apex details at different degrees of severity. Shoes are both “weaponized” and “galvanized.” Firemen’s “Safety Orange” offers a metaphor for Helmut Lang’s vigilant outlook in several ensembles. The goal here is to “predict unpredictability,” per the designer.
Despite the line’s danger-defying persona, Do’s latest designs still project the contemporary Helmut Lang personality. Composite suiting silhouettes combine wool (in the front) and ponte jersey (in the back), mimicking the duality of the line’s inspirations and nodding to Lang’s penchant for deconstruction and reconstruction.
Denim, handwoven leather and jacquard knitwear are adorned with Hong Kong’s red-white-and-blue bag prints, while gowns are constructed of hosiery jersey to flatter the body. Several leather coats possess fearless lapel-like collars that fan out to shrine their wearers’ collarbones and faces. Here, “beauty” and “resilience” are Do’s key words. Just because the clothes are protective doesn’t mean they can’t be confident, too.
hey
lovely blog hope all is well
happy blogging.