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Feben Fall 2025 Ready-to-Wear
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Feben Fall 2025 Ready-to-Wear

Edith Bouvier Beale - better known as Little Edie - is a pop-cultural icon for good reason. Wrapped in a tight headscarf and lashings of fox fur, the late model and socialite, first cousin of Jackie O, and tragic protagonist of the 1975 documentary Grey Gardens is an emblem of a stoic blue-bloodedness in spite of circumstance. The sort of person who’d rather sit in a cold, damp-infested stone manor swaddled in her ancestral pelts than sell them to pay the heating bill.Feben, the London-based designer, is not necessarily someone who can relate to Beale on the level of direct lived experience—the hard times she has experienced are not, for example, the result of a frittered family fortune but rather of the punitive bureaucratic and sociopolitical circumstances that befall many first-generation migrants from the Global South to the Global North. Still, when she saw the film that turned Beale into the cult figure she now is, she felt a strong degree of relatability.“I really found myself drawn to the strength of her mood,” the designer said. “She’s a rebel in her own right, and there’s a really staunch quality to her personality.” Staunch, in fact, is the name of the collection that Feben offered this season, and, befitting its title, it’s easily her most committed and accomplished body of work to date.

She drew on Beale’s kitschy commitment to uncompromising glamour while it’s all falling apart with a sleeved A-line tea dress that came with an asymmetrical drape of crystal-strewn faux fur; the material was also used for a hulking keyhole silhouette dress. Impeccable tailoring in marigold satin featured princess seam detailing on the reverse, delivering a cinch that exudes an air of debonair composure, while a purple satin cocktail dress and a gingham jersey gown boasted knotted cutouts at the midriff, as if tacked together while it’s all coming undone.

These pieces were savvily executed, and decidedly chic, with a hint of edge to counterpose any potential readings of stuffiness. For long-standing fans of the brand, though, the most exciting looks will be those that dig deep into Feben’s accumulating archive, like the checked yellow dress featuring a curvy trompe l’oeil damask slip gown down the front. It’s a conscious nod to the designer’s Central Saint Martins graduate collection, in which she printed the nude figure of Nina Simone on a stretch mesh dress, in a confrontation with contemporary Western fashion’s inability to accommodate, let alone celebrate, Black women’s bodies. Granted, the commentary here was not quite so obvious or charged, but it’s spiriting to see Feben find ways of integrating that messaging within such a commercially promising collection with an IYKYK wink.

vogue.com by Mahoro Seward 

published on February 22, 2025