BERSHKA Embraces the Faded & Frayed for Spring 2025

The Fashionisto

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Published April 5, 2025

BERSHKA unveils the first drop of its spring-summer 2025 collection.Pin
BERSHKA unveils the first drop of its spring-summer 2025 collection. Photo: BERSHKA

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

Teo Bates wears a short-sleeve sweater with parachute pants. Pin
Teo Bates wears a short-sleeve sweater with parachute pants. Photo: BERSHKA

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.

Mahamadou Cisse wears a matching vest and trousers by BERSHKA.Pin
Mahamadou Cisse wears a matching vest and trousers by BERSHKA. Photo: BERSHKA

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.

Zhicheng Han wears a cropped blazer with barrel-fit jeans from BERSHKA. Pin
Zhicheng Han wears a cropped blazer with barrel-fit jeans from BERSHKA. Photo: BERSHKA

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.

Jay Thor wears a deconstructed sweater from BERSHKA's latest drop.Pin
Jay Thor wears a deconstructed sweater from BERSHKA’s latest drop. Photo: BERSHKA

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.

Cash Peters wears a crochet-textured shirt from BERSHKA's spring-summer 2025 drop. Pin
Cash Peters wears a crochet-textured shirt from BERSHKA’s spring-summer 2025 drop. Photo: BERSHKA

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.

Neutral tones take the spotlight for BERSHKA's spring-summer 2025 collection.Pin
Neutral tones take the spotlight for BERSHKA’s spring-summer 2025 collection. Photo: BERSHKA

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