SS25 — Summary

SS25 — Summary

For SS25, OP Haneen rewinds its trajectory. Revisiting its earliest silhouettes and ideas, like the now-discontinued Gardener, this season breaks from the brand’s recent rhythm to re-engage with its raw beginnings.

This is the brand’s largest collection to date, and its most unapologetically distorted. Visual clarity is replaced with deliberate interference, prints rendered pixelated, textures blurred, outlines lost. From afar, the garments appear finely illustrated; up close, they dissolve. This contradiction is intentional. A nod to wabi-sabi, reinterpreted not as poetic imperfection, but as resistance. Resistance to hyper-finish. Resistance to control. Resistance to the myth of perfection.

“There’s no such thing as perfect,” the brand notes. “And I don’t like when things look perfect.”

This anti-perfectionist stance emerged from observation: customers don’t fixate on whether a floral curve is mathematically correct, they’re drawn to how a piece makes them feel. So each print here is both unrefined and fully formed. It doesn't ask to be studied. It asks to be seen.

Built around relaxed button-downs, textural cargo shorts, and a few modular outerwear pieces, the collection stays tactile and functional. It’s wearable protest, crafted in pixels and shadows.

SS25 isn’t a refinement, it’s a return. A reminder that beautiful doesn’t have to mean clean. And that distortion, sometimes, is the truest kind of clarity.

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