Henrik Vibskov Fall/Winter 2014 | Paris Fashion Week

The Fashionisto

/

Published January 19, 2014

henrik vibskov fall winter 2014 show photos 0014Pin

Henrik Vibskov Fall/Winter 2014–Entitling his fall/winter 2014 collection The Spaghetti Handjob, designer Henrik Vibskov explored opposites. Extending his eccentric aesthetic through concepts including cutting and folding and disorder and order, Vibskov layered and cut his way to an interesting collection. Armed with drop shoulders and voluminous silhouettes, proportions and prints aided a visual outing. Overall, adding character to a contemporary take on sportswear, Vibskov achieved a balanced collection.


Recent Updates

Eckhaus Latta Fall 2025 Reworks Utility

Eckhaus Latta Fall 2025 Reworks Utility

At New York Fashion Week, Eckhaus Latta unveiled a fall-winter 2025 collection rooted in material innovation and utilitarian silhouettes. Partnering ...
White Mountaineering Fall 2025 Embraces Brutalism

White Mountaineering Fall 2025 Embraces Brutalism

White Mountaineering’s fall-winter 2025 collection distills the essence of Brutalism, an architectural movement defined by raw materials, stark functionality, and ...
Coach Fall 2025 Embraces Proportion Play

Coach Fall 2025 Embraces Proportion Play

Coach took over the Park Avenue Armory for fall 2025, where Stuart Vevers reimagined American heritage through a modern, raw-edged ...
Calvin Klein Collection Makes a Comeback for Fall 2025

Calvin Klein Collection Makes a Comeback for Fall 2025

Veronica Leoni’s debut at Calvin Klein signals a compelling embrace of nineties minimalism through a modern perspective. The revival starts ...
Zegna Fall 2025 Delivers Soft Pursuit of Wool

Zegna Fall 2025 Delivers Soft Pursuit of Wool

Zegna’s fall-winter 2025 “Vellus Aureum” collection arrives as an homage to Ermenegildo Zegna’s quest for the world’s most precious wool ...
Y-3 Fall 2025 Embraces Insulated Chic

Y-3 Fall 2025 Embraces Insulated Chic

Y-3 unveiled its fall-winter 2025 collection, “Finding the Real in the Surreal,” in Paris. First came a volley of black ...