
Graphpaper presented its Spring Summer 2027 collection, What Time Leaves Behind, during Paris Men’s Fashion Week. The presentation took place at 21 Rue Chapon in the Marais, a Paris district shaped by art, design and fashion culture. The brand introduced its latest garments and aesthetic to international buyers, media, creators and the local community through a format that extended beyond clothing.
SPRING SUMMER 2027
The season explored beauty that gains depth with time. Graphpaper linked that idea to a Japanese sense of stillness and to yohaku, the concept of empty space. The brand used modern structure and function to shape the collection, avoiding ornamental signs of Japanese culture. Instead, the garments focused on wear, evolving fabric texture, subtle coloration and the presence of the materials themselves.

What Time Leaves Behind considered how time changes surfaces. Fabric gains texture through use, color settles into quieter tones and material begins to carry its own presence. Graphpaper built the collection around that process, allowing clothing to speak through proportion, space and touch.
The venue expanded the collection’s theme through a physical installation. Four key colors structured the space, each drawn from natural elements altered by time. Aged porcelain informed white. Moss on stone brought green into the environment. Dry weathered wood shaped beige. Ink absorbed into paper gave the installation its black tone.


Graphpaper worked with artists and studios from different disciplines to carry the idea of What Time Leaves Behind through the entire environment. Clothing formed one part of the presentation, while objects, scent, taste and visual works deepened the experience inside the venue.
At the private reception, confectionery artist Okashimaru served treats inspired by the four thematic colors. Olfactive Studio Ne created a custom fragrance centered on Moss, filling the venue with scent and giving the space another layer of perception. Ceramicist Naotsugu Yoshida created 50 white porcelain vases exclusively for the occasion. Graphpaper placed these calm forms throughout the venue alongside artwork by Daichiro Shinjo from the private collection of Graphpaper director Takayuki Minami.

















