There is something interesting about the tie.
It was never designed for women.
And maybe that is exactly why it works.
Over the past weeks, I found myself working on different shoots where a similar idea kept reappearing.
The tie.
Different outfits. Different settings. Different moods.
And yet, the same detail kept returning.
At first, it felt like a coincidence. Then it started to look like a pattern.
What makes the tie interesting is not the object itself.
It’s what it represents.
Structure.
Control.
Formality.
A certain idea of authority that has historically been defined in very specific ways.
And then, placed in a completely different context, it becomes something else.
Not a symbol of conformity. But a detail that shifts the balance.
Worn with tailoring, it sharpens the silhouette.
Worn with something unexpected, it creates tension.
Worn casually, it almost feels ironic.
Across these images, the tie stopped being an accessory.
It became a point of contrast.
A small disruption that made each look slightly more interesting than it would have been otherwise.
What I found most fascinating was how naturally it adapted!
Different creative directions, different environments, different aesthetics… and still, the same element found its place every time.
Not forced. Not explained. Just… there.
Sometimes the most interesting ideas in fashion are not the ones that are planned too precisely.
They are the ones that appear, repeat themselves, and quietly start telling a story.
Without needing to be announced.
And maybe that is exactly what happened here!
Enjoy the different outfits in the video down here !
Silvia
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