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Robert Wun does not do quiet couture and thank God for that. This collection, Valor: The Desire to Create, and the Courage to Carry On, unfolded inside the Lido with thunderstorms crashing on giant screens like a very expensive emotional support system. No feathers, no nostalgia. Just drama, intention, and that very specific Wun-brand intensity that makes you sit up straight.
The collection moved in three acts and honestly, it felt like therapy in couture form. The opening chapter, Library, was all black and white and surprisingly restrained for a designer who loves excess. Sculpted silhouettes, sharp contours, rounded bolero shoulders, flared skirts. It was controlled, thoughtful, almost studious. Then came the dress. A massive circular gown encrusted with micro glass beads and weighing roughly as much as a grown human. The model carried it like it was nothing, which felt like the most accurate metaphor for couture I have seen all season.
Luxury followed, and this is where Wun really leaned into discomfort. Molded bodices resembling jewellery display stands, crystal face masks that erased identity, sharp corsetry and trailing skirts. It was beautiful, intimidating, and slightly unhinged in the best way. Luxury here was not aspirational. It was confrontational. You want this. Can you survive it.
Robert Wun understands that couture is not meant to be polite or practical. It is meant to be obsessive, excessive, and emotionally charged. Wun’s couture remains heavy, both physically and emotionally, but within that weight lies clarity. In a season of extremes, Valor argued convincingly that couture survives not by being practical, but by insisting on the courage to dream anyway. It felt mythological, almost ritualistic.
















Pictures courtesy of Vogue Runway
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We do not own the rights to any of these images and they have been used in good faith. Every effort has been made to ensure that all images are used with proper credits. If you are the rightful owner of any image used on our site and wish to have it removed, please contact us at ayerhsmagazine@gmail.com and we will promptly remove it. We are a non-commercial, passion-driven, independent fashion blog and do not intend to infringe any copyright. Thank you for your understanding.

