Perishable Beauty is a conceptual exploration of decay, transformation, and unconventional beauty. The collection channels the idea of “perishable beauty” by using the process of fabric selection, cutting, and garment-making as a metaphor for decomposition. It begins with garments made from virgin lace fabrics—materials traditionally associated with luxury and conventional evening wear—and gradually transitions into looks crafted from the scraps and remnants of earlier pieces. These materials are reimagined through experimental techniques that give form to garments that are sculptural and evocative.

As the collection progresses, the silhouettes become more deconstructed and emotive. Fabrics once pristine are reduced to fragments, repurposed into new forms that retain their beauty, even in states of apparent disintegration. This process reflects a deliberate movement away from traditional ideals, embracing the raw, the broken, and the reassembled as equally beautiful.

The Collection proposes a coexistence of loss and elegance—where discomfort meets dark romance, and the remnants of stereotypical beauty are transformed into something evocative, and hauntingly beautiful. It challenges the viewer to find beauty in what is typically discarded, and to question the permanence and cost of conventional ideals.