Figures Materialise at Rains
For Fall-Winter 2024, Rains continues to make its mark on Paris Fashion Week by spinning a new narrative out of its humble beginnings: the humble rain jacket. With projections to become a €200 million business in the next five years, the Danish outerwear lifestyle brand pared things back with their presentation to allow its audience to look closer at the craftsmanship and detail that goes into one of its special runway creations. The slower-paced immersive experience witnessed models snaking through the show space before they were scanned and 3-D printed into smaller figures.
Co-founders Philip Lotko and Daniel Brix Hesselager considered uniforms and how they have the possibility to allow the wearer to interpret them through their own lens. Individualism, they asserted, is more important than ever. It manifested in the ensuing looks, which spanned a palette nodding to retrofuturism. Mainly, some recalled slick flight suits while others could resemble dressing gowns or house coats. Models wore 3-D printed slides, a continuation of their collaboration with Zellerfeld, the German footwear company. There were pieces that suggested tarpaulins used as protection from the elements. Ultimately, the endless interpretations of the rain jacket felt modern and desirable, even if the garment isn’t inherently sexy. “Our ambition is to leave a big mark on Paris,” said Lotko, in a Zoom call, alongside his co-founder, Brix Hesselager. By Paul McLauchlan.