FALL 2024 READY-TO-WEAR
As a Ukrainian designer, it was meaningful for Svitlana Bevza to showcase her collection at the Ukrainian Institute of America.
As a nonprofit organization donated by an inventor, William Dzus, it focuses on promoting the art, music, and culture of Ukraine.
It also set the perfect backdrop to Bevzas minimally aesthetic clothes that a formerVoguecolleague, Liana Satenstein, described as rich bitch clothing backstage, a fitting term for a show that was able to get Lauren Santo Domingo and Derek Blasberg into the front row.

Symbolism is a key aspect of the designers collections, with last season focusing on the marigold, and this seasons focus being grain.
As one of the countrys main cultural exports, Bevza wanted to tie it into her collection through square-cut apron dresses that came in a variety of fabrics, like eco-leather and viscose.
It was a metaphor for me in a way, that we bake a lot of bread for a lot of countries in the world, she said.

Elsewhere, the Tisto vest (which means dough in Ukrainian) was hand-knitted to mimic the texture of a braided bread pattern.
Styling remains important at Bevzas shows, and this year the designer was focused on portraying an old-school elegance, fitting for societys obsession with quiet luxury and swan culture.
An excellent example was a split collar shirt and paper-bag-esque trousers that cinched at the waist with a thin leather belt.

For outerwear, Bevza focused on an A-shaped silhouette inspired by a traditional 19th-century Ukrainian coat called a Kozhukh, which comes in two variations: sleeveless and not.
While Bevza traditionally sticks to a more neutral color palette, she added hints of gold and brown to pay homage to the color of wheat fields.
The progression of the shades of brown lightened as we got closer to the finale, a symbol of when wheat is ready to be harvested.

It may not have been intentional, but with a Bevza collection, there is always a clear beginning and end.
Collection
MORE FROM Fall 2024 Ready-to-Wear
Apiece Apart
Fall 2024 Ready-to-Wear
Moncler Genius
H&M Studio
Area
Sachin & Babi
Emilio Pucci











