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We believe in a better system and in fashion that works beyond mass-produced goods and provides relevant answers to pressing current issues. What creative contribution can fashion make in a time of accelerated consumption and ecological catastrophes? What basic attitude do issues such as identity, diversity and inclusion demand? How can these questions be translated into aesthetically functional statements without favoring one-sided or too quick solutions? Or even more fundamentally: how can fashion be used not only to answer questions, but also to pose new ones?

We sat down with fashion advocate Mark Holgate from Vogue and discussed our vision for the future of fashion. Here is an excerpt:

"Elsewhere, a black bomber jacket—the bomber offers endless fascination, and opportunity for reinvention, to this city's designers, it seems—is draped and gathered, creating a rippling effect across it, and is designed, as is everything else here, without recourse to thinking about gender. For Ehrhardt, the bomer is the archetypal Haderlump item, perhaps to be worn with a pair of strictly belted and high waisted wide legged jeans or trousers. For Ehrhardt, the appeal of the bomber to him as a designer is due to its appeal for the people wearing his clothes. "You make the tailleur finish that bit higher," he said with a grin, "and it can make your butt look higher too.