Baum und Pferdgarten Resort 2027
Baum und Pferdgarten Resort 2027 collection, runway looks, beauty, models, and reviews.

Reported by Vogue.
Pinstripes have long been the armor of boardrooms and power brokers — stiff, severe, aggressively masculine by design. Copenhagen label Baum und Pferdgarten isn't here for any of that. For Resort 2027, designers Rikke Baumgarten and Helle Hestehave set out to dismantle suiting's brute authority by running it straight through a lingerie filter, according to Vogue. What started as a conceptual exercise in "lingerie suiting" evolved into something richer: a full interrogation of how femininity can occupy the same space as power — on its own terms.
The execution is where it gets interesting. Pinstriped fabric — Wall Street's tried-and-true — gets cut into a body-defining dress, its severity broken by a flirtatious white-lined frill at the hem. A lacy slip dress layered beneath an organza overdress plays with exposure and concealment in equal measure. For anyone who finds both extremes a little too committed, a lace-trimmed slip skirt paired with a boxy gray plaid coat threads the needle between dressed-down sensuality and structured ease. It's the kind of dressing that doesn't ask you to choose a lane.
The Details Doing Heavy Lifting
Black dominates the palette — an unusual primary for a resort collection, but one that lands as a deliberate nod to fall 2027's emerging direction. The label isn't chasing warmth for warmth's sake; they're building something more versatile and considered. On the denim front, carrot-legged, sharply creased jeans in a light wash push past the barrel-leg moment into cleaner, more defined silhouette territory. And the standout cozy piece — an oversized pink bouclé sweater with a button-in, button-out lining — delivers puffer-jacket warmth without the bulk, which feels like exactly the kind of practical reinvention the "quiet luxury" crowd quietly needed.
What Baumgarten and Hestehave are doing here isn't revolutionary in a screaming-headline way, but it is precise. Resort collections often function as filler between the main events — but this one reads as a genuine thesis statement about femininity as a spectrum rather than a binary. Soft and structured. Covered and revealed. Office and bedroom. Not a compromise — a conversation.
When a label can make pinstripes feel like an act of reclamation rather than surrender, they're doing something worth paying attention to.
Read the original at Vogue.


