
Camiel Fortgens presented Spring Summer 2027 during Paris Fashion Week on the terrace of a traditional Paris bistro, placing the collection inside the rhythm of daily life. The setting allowed the clothes to move through an ordinary public space rather than a controlled show environment. Guests sat at café tables, ordered, lingered, watched, and slowly became part of the scene.
SPRING SUMMER 2027
The SS27 collection continues Camiel Fortgens’ close study of garments and how they come together. The brand turns clothing inside out, bringing hidden parts to the surface and giving construction a visible role. Linings and facings appear on the outside. Prints sit on the reverse side of fabrics. Contrast stitching, raw hems, repairs, and handmade elements show the labor behind each piece.

This approach gives the clothes a direct, unfinished force. Fortgens uses deconstruction without turning it into excess. The garments hold onto familiar forms while shifting the viewer’s attention toward seams, edges, layers, and traces of making. Every piece carries a sense of touch, as if someone adjusted, repaired, washed, or rebuilt it over time.
Soft pinks, forest greens, and deep burgundy tones move through washes, fades, and overdyes. These treatments allow colors to shift into one another with subtle irregularity, as if time and wear had already passed through the fabric. The effect recalls the accidental change of laundry, like a single red sock left in the washing machine. Fortgens turns that small domestic accident into a way of thinking about color, memory, and use.

References to farmer’s wear and functional outdoor clothing appear across the collection. Loose linen trousers, woven straw bags, and practical silhouettes introduce a rural mood while staying close to everyday dressing. The presentation deepened that idea. Models moved among guests as if they belonged to the terrace’s normal pace. Some passed by, some sat down to read, and others listened to podcasts through headphones. The scene blurred the line between model, guest, and passerby.

















