
BERSHKA’s spring-summer 2025 drop leans into worn surfaces, roomy cuts, and grounded textures—a departure from fast-moving trend cycles in favor of something more tactile, slower, and lived-in.
Faded knits, sun-washed cotton, and distressed finishes turn fabric into narrative, as if each piece arrived pre-weathered from a desert windstorm or an artist’s studio.
BERSHKA Spring/Summer 2025

What defines this BERSHKA drop isn’t a single aesthetic but a controlled blend: soft structure, utilitarian nods, and raw finishes stitched into looks that walk the line between functional and undone.
Detachable parachute pants and chunky-soled shoes brush up against loose-knit sweaters with frayed hems and softly rumpled shirts in gauzy textures.

The season is streetwear adjacent at most—this collection distances itself from the graphic noise and leans into something more material-driven, more architectural in its volume.

The cropped plaid blazer is a subtle rebellion against classic tailoring, while the barrel-fit jeans recall early-’90s Antwerp silhouettes reimagined for today’s oversized sensibility.

Color plays a restrained but crucial role: earthy browns, muddy greens, and soft greys set a monochrome base, while muted accents like a washed-out scarf or burnished hardware punctuate the neutrality.

BERSHKA isn’t chasing polish here. Instead, it’s offering a wardrobe that feels like it’s been broken in before you even touch it—a confidence rendered through fabric weight, proportion, and wear.





