Fashion
LFW weekend: Erdem, Simone Rocha, Kent & Curwen, Johanna Parv
Published
September 21, 2025
London Fashion Week went hyper experimental this Sunday, with surrealist couture from Erdem, disgruntled debutantes at Simone Rocha, conceptual picnics Kent & Curwen, and full-on ergonomic sporty chic at Johanna Parv.
Erdem: Surrealist chic
No designer can boast of more unlikely muses than Erdem Moralioglu, whose wellspring this season was a wantonly obscure surrealist artist named Hélène Smith.
Though that very obscurity helped inspire another great collection from Erdem. Bloomsbury couture at its best.
Catherine-Elise Muller, know artistically as Hélène Smith, was the dubbed the “muse of automatic writing” by the early Surrealists over a century ago. Copies of those texts were embroidered on lace chess piece sheaths densely embroidered with fabric petals and flowers, or on superb starch tulle corset cocktail or moulded bustier dresses.
Smith’s other claim to fame was her belief that she was a medium, able to communicate with the deceased Victor Hugo or Cagliostro. She also believed that through trances she had voyaged to the court of Versailles, Rajasthan and even Mars.
The Versailles cycle represented by high lace-collared gowns and shirts or structured paniers riffing on Marie Antoinette. While her imagined sojourn in India mangled with her space trip in neon crushed embroidered linen sculpted dresses, worn on the cast marching in courtesan ribboned shoes.
A selection of mannish blazers and striped double-breasted jackets were in turn inspired by psychologist Théodore Flournoy, who published a book on her voyages entitled, “From India to the Planet Mars”.
Smith ended up dying in complete obscurity, but this Sunday in a magnificent show under the columns of the British Museum she galvanized a moment of fashion glory.
Simone Rocha: Disgruntled debutantes
The afternoon led us to the Mansion House in the City of London, an apt location for the theme of Rocha’s highly experimental – even by her standards – collection.
A long show – by London standards – of 52 looks, most of whom jumbled up epochs and eras in an occasionally disconcerting, though oft times, beautiful manner.
For next spring, Rocha loves sateen georgette, floral jacquards and silk organzas, cutting them into crinolines, Venetian tailcoats or hoop skirts. Before promptly covering many of these very looks in transparent plastic coats and trenches, finished in confetti prints.
“Disgruntled debutantes… A young woman forced to wear her mother’s clothes,” was the Irish designer’s definition of this spring/summer 2026 collection.
That was apparent in the opening looks: a refined organza crinoline embroidered with tiny flowers, combined rebelliously with a silver sequin bra with black lace trim. Then followed up by an oversized trapeze dress over which was plastered too huge fabric flowers.
“I really wanted to push a button when it came to my fundamental codes,” added Simone, referencing the crinolines exposed through semi sheer organza. Before adding a soupçon of perversity by covering many dresses with mini corsets.
Revealing that when it came to her own mother’s wardrobe, Simone would wear her skirts as dresses pulled up high, the better to expose shoes. A vital part of Simone Rocha’s business, which this season featured platforms with Georgian moulding or Perspex escarpins.
Her women’s clothes were deliberately not too ladylike, with lots of exposed underwear. But her menswear was positively foppish: scarlet red jacquard cloaks worn with trumpet lilies, or a ruffled soutane seen on a model carrying a ruffled satin pillow.
All driven on by a great soundtrack by Frederic Sanchez that included chunks of Marianne Faithfull with the Prague Philharmonic and the demonic sounds of “King Night” by Salem.
No one could fault Simone for not taking risks in this performance, which won her a huge cheer and prolonged applause when she took a smiling bow.
Kent & Curwen: The united parks of London
A distinctive change of gear and tone at Kent & Curwen, where designer Daniel Kearns lightened mood and materials, even as he kept a tight focus on the brand’s three lions logo and DNA.
Nice also to see an artfully produced show by producer Robin Scott-Lawson, where a set of ten 10X20 foot LED screens projected images of multiple London parks featuring kids at play, football games, boat trips and splendid giant plane trees. Guests even received smart striped blankets – ideal for a picnic on Sunday, in a sunbathed UK capital.
An ideal backdrop to the clothes. They blended haute-couture fabrics like jacquard and chiffon with techy nylons, so the clothes managed to operate on multiple levels. Creating an agreeably conceptual take on such a storied brand as Kent & Curwen.
Draping a fab short tennis dress or a superb ivory coat dress, where a blazer met a plissé chiffon skirt. Dreaming up white multi-petal swimsuits for girls, and shirts for guys in this co-ed show. Going positively Japanese with chiffon minis topped by feathered bra tops.
Before returning to the brand’s roots in bold graphic rugby colors used in pink and blue trench coats. And respecting its English roots with some great sweaters embroidered with fabric roses, and a bravura finale of Photoshop English floral pants and tops for Kearns most investigational collection for this house.
Johanna Parv: Sports, fashion, action
All-action women at Johanna Parv, where the cast dashed about the catwalk in her bold and brilliant vision of transformative sporty chic.
Using techy fabrics, Parv creates clothes that manage to be sporty, yet professional. Protective yet chic. Practical in changing weather conditions, yet sleek and stylish. Plausible from a bike ride to board room.
Kicking off the action with gym exits – taut shirts and tops, dissected with her action bags. Followed by impeccable sporty jerkins and pants cut diagonally at the ankle to suggest speed. Clever use of angled zips and ties made the clothes look and be multi-functional.
The result was a collection that reinforced women’s independence via fashion. From the updated sheriff’s dusters in anthracite to the charcoal nylon track jackets, blousons and culottes. Also including her a hybrid bags, worn sometimes as backpack, other times as ergonomic fanny pack, and even as wrap around messenger bag, attachable to a bicycle frame. Hence its name – ‘Frame‘. All of them looked cool.
“Johanna Parv brings out the inner Lime rider in us all,” commented insightfully BFC CEO Laura Weir.
In her program notes, the Estonia-born designer referenced reading “Streetwalking the Metropolis” by Deborah L Parsons – a famed study of female writers’ experiences and perceptions of negotiating the urban landscape. This collection seems ideal for today’s urban jungle.
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Fashion
Bangladesh–US tariff deal may have limited impact on India
Bangladesh is already among the top suppliers of apparel to the US, particularly in basic knit and woven categories such as T-shirts, trousers and sweaters. A tariff advantage, even if modest, could sharpen its price competitiveness in high-volume, price-sensitive segments dominated by mass retailers.
The proposed Bangladesh–US trade understanding offering near zero-tariff access for garments has sparked debate in India’s textile sector.
While Bangladesh may gain a price edge in basic apparel, industry leaders believe the effective advantage could be limited to 2–3 per cent due to raw material dependence, capacity constraints and logistics costs.
However, Indian industry leaders argue that the net gain for Bangladesh may be restricted to around 2–3 per cent in effective competitiveness. They point to structural constraints, including Bangladesh’s heavy reliance on imported raw materials. A significant share of its fabric and yarn requirements is sourced from China and India, limiting flexibility in rules-of-origin compliance if strict value-addition conditions are attached to the deal.
Capacity limitations in spinning, weaving and man-made fibre processing are also seen as bottlenecks. While Bangladesh has built scale in garmenting, its upstream integration remains narrower than India’s diversified fibre-to-fashion base. Indian exporters emphasise that integrated supply chains offer advantages in speed, customisation and smaller batch production.
Logistics and lead times may further temper expectations. Distance from major US ports, coupled with infrastructure pressures and global shipping volatility, could offset part of the tariff benefit. In contrast, Indian suppliers have been investing in port connectivity, digital compliance systems and flexible production models to strengthen reliability.
Industry representatives also highlight that US buyers are increasingly factoring in sustainability, traceability and geopolitical risk. India’s growing adoption of renewable energy in textile clusters, compliance with global standards and broader product depth may help it retain strategic sourcing partnerships.
While some diversion of orders in basic categories cannot be ruled out, exporters believe the overall impact will be incremental rather than disruptive. The consensus view is that tariff preference alone is unlikely to override considerations of scale, compliance, diversification and long-term supply-chain resilience.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KUL)
Fashion
US lawmakers introduce Last Sale Valuation Act to end customs loophole
“This bill protects Louisiana workers and American businesses, ensuring loopholes don’t hold them back,” Dr Cassidy said in a press release.
US Senators Bill Cassidy and Sheldon Whitehouse have introduced the Last Sale Valuation Act to close the ‘first sale’ customs loophole that lets importers underpay duties.
The bipartisan bill would base tariffs on final sale values, strengthen US Customs enforcement and curb duty evasion.
Supporters say it will protect American manufacturers, workers and federal revenue.
If passed, the bipartisan measure would grant clearer enforcement authority to US Customs and Border Protection (CBP), streamline valuation reviews and reduce disputes over documentation, while curbing mis-invoicing and related-party pricing schemes linked to tariff evasion and illicit financial activity.
The legislation has drawn support from the American Compass, the Coalition for a Prosperous America and the Southern Shrimp Alliance.
“Cassidy’s ‘Last Sale Valuation Act’ strengthens customs valuation by assessing duties on the final transaction value of goods entering the US,” said Mark A DiPlacido, senior political economist at the American Compass, adding that closing the judicially created ‘first sale’ loophole would reduce duty evasion, simplify enforcement and increase customs revenue.
Jon Toomey, president of the Coalition for a Prosperous America, said the bill is “an important first step in restoring customs integrity,” ensuring duties are paid on the true commercial value of imported goods and helping level the playing field for American manufacturers and workers.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (CG)
Fashion
Rieter responds to higher raw material prices
Rising global political and economic tensions have driven sustained increases in raw material and energy costs, impacting the textile machinery sector.
Rieter has faced mounting input expenses amid strong demand and price hikes for various materials.
The company has so far absorbed the additional costs but will implement price adjustments from March 2026 as pressures persist.
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