For her fall collection, Sonia Carrasco focused on the courage of her textile artistry. “We wanted to expose that inner part, to show where the piece started, to reveal the process,” she explained. She opened with a crisp blazer, with a design that evolved into a more manipulated shape, modified through cut and stitching. The result was a series of pieces that looked unfinished, with visible seams and reverse knitting. For Carrasco, this was a way to put quality first. “You see the work behind it; the refinement and the details; and that is also a way to take care of our customers,” the designer added.
The 36 looks that made up her collection were made from deadstock and recycled fabrics. Carrasco fused tailoring and knitwear, often creating more suggestive pieces that revealed different parts of the body. “We wanted to give a raw feel to the pieces: a hanging lining here or a hasty cut there,” she said. “We wanted the clothes to speak for themselves and appeal to a new generation that understands fashion and sexuality in a carefree way.”