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Rubén Palma

Rubén Palma

Think deep, don't sink

    FASHION

    STEL at Copenhagen Fashion Week Is Designing Clothes for Real Life, Not the Runway

    by Rubén Palma January 28, 2026
    written by Rubén Palma

    At Copenhagen Fashion Week, STEL returned with a proposal that felt less like a presentation and more like an open conversation. For Collection 09, designer Astrid Andersen chose to slow the pace, reframing fashion not as spectacle but as something lived, worn, and moved through — every single day.

    Instead of a traditional runway, the collection debuted through a panel discussion held at Grand Teatret, one of Copenhagen’s oldest cinemas. Joined by longtime collaborator A$AP Nast and professional skateboarder Beatrice Domond, Andersen positioned the collection within a broader cultural dialogue — one that treats clothing as a response to how people actually exist in the world.

    • Photo: STEL / Finn Christian Peper
    • Photo: STEL / Finn Christian Peper
    • Photo: STEL / Finn Christian Peper
    • Photo: STEL / Finn Christian Peper
    • Photo: STEL / Finn Christian Peper
    • Photo: STEL / Finn Christian Peper
    • Photo: STEL / Finn Christian Peper
    • Photo: STEL / Finn Christian Peper
    • Photo: STEL / Finn Christian Peper
    • Photo: STEL / Finn Christian Peper

    At its core, Collection 09 is about mobility. The garments are built for bodies in motion, for days that blur work, leisure, and transition. Tailoring is present, but never rigid. Utility appears, but without aggression. Think structured pieces that refuse to restrict, clothes that carry polish without stiffness.

    Andersen’s background in menswear remains visible, especially in her ongoing obsession with comfort through construction. Cargo trousers are reworked with split seams and flexible fits, blazers take on bomber-like proportions, and denim expands into padded outerwear that feels protective without feeling heavy. Mohair knits, sculpted dark denim, wrap elements, pleats, and layered constructions all point to a wardrobe designed to adapt — not dictate.

    Photos: STEL / Finn Christian Peper

    The choice of Beatrice Domond as the face of the collection is no accident. Shot wearing tailoring she could realistically skate in, the imagery reconnects STEL to its original impulse: function first, aesthetics second — but never at the expense of either. It’s a reminder that elegance doesn’t have to mean stillness.

    “Designed for real bodies and real life,” Andersen explains, “this collection reflects STEL’s belief that clothing should support women through movement, change, and everyday reality.” It’s a philosophy that runs quietly but consistently through every piece — garments meant to grow with the wearer, rather than perform for the moment.

    Collection 09 launches in August for Autumn Winter 2026. STEL is stocked at END, Selfridges, Storm Copenhagen and online store Stelstores.com.

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