Photo Credits: Robert Wun/ Reproduction
In the twilight of tradition and the dawn of new mythologies, Robert Wun’s Fall Couture 2025 collection unfolds like a cinematic dream, a symphony of shadows and light that transcends mere fabric to become a vessel for the soul’s metamorphosis. Becoming is not simply a wardrobe; it is an odyssey, a sacred rite of passage where the human form is both canvas and crucible.
Credits: Robert Wun/ Reproduction
Here, the garments breathe with an otherworldly vitality. Capes swell like darkened clouds ready to burst; veils ripple with the whispers of ancient incantations. The silhouettes do not merely drape the body; they cocoon it in layers of meaning, crafting a dialogue between what is seen and what is hidden, between the self remembered and the self yet to be born.

Photo Credits: Daniele Oberrauch
The palette ethereal greys, deep onyx, shimmering metallics—evokes a world caught between dusk and dawn, a liminal space where past and future entwine. Each stitch, each fold, each whisper of silk and satin is a fragment of a larger cinematic narrative: a journey through the emotional landscapes of love and loss, desire and transcendence.

Credits: Robert Wun/ Reproduction
Wun’s vision reaches beyond fashion’s surface, delving into the realm of ritual and myth. The collection becomes a procession of modern-day oracles, garments imbued with a timeless spirituality, evoking ceremonies that speak of transformation and renewal. It is a call to embrace complexity and contradiction to find beauty in the ephemeral and strength in vulnerability.


Photo Credits: Daniele Oberrauch /Reproduction
Becoming is a utopian dream spun in fabric, a bold statement that haute couture can be a living, breathing entity — a cinematic experience where wearer and garment merge, storytelling becomes embodiment, and fashion transcends to sacred art.
This is not just clothing; it is the resurrection of identity, the alchemy of becoming whole amidst a fractured world.


Photo Credits: Daniele Oberrauch /Reproduction
Credits: Robert Wun/ Reproduction