The collection draws inspiration from travel and botanical obsessions: Mexican cactus dahlias, Brazilian bromeliads, South African birds of paradise. Koma transforms nature into something wild, carnal, and precious at the same time—as if women were making their way through nature, confident in the path they have taken; as if all the power of the jungle were channeled through them.
Koma cuts femininity as if it were a broken glass: precise, brilliant, and dangerous. Dresses with impossible slits, transparencies that stretch the body until it becomes a sculpture, and flowing pants that walk as if they had no fear. Amidst all this, knitted vines, overflowing shirts, and feathers make each look a creature from another planet, turning the models into bird-goddesses, half human, half mythological beings of our era.
The details steal the show: black patent leather and crystal leaves that crawl like poisonous jewels, mythical corn cob necklaces, oversized stained glass embroidery, and a palette that ranges from acid to electric tones—neon peach, kiwi green, sparkle blue—against the eternal contrast of black and white in the designer’s universe.
In Koma’s garden, beauty blooms with teeth, and women cease to be a refuge and become warriors.
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