
Self-Portrait Fall 2025 Ready-to-Wear
Han Chong is not the kind of designer to present a mood board papered with esoteric references, and nor does he theme his collections around lofty narratives that make profound statements about the state of the world. Thatâs not to say he couldnâtâitâs easy to insert depth where there is noneâbut he is too pragmatic to waste time stroking his chin when there are people out there who just want to look and feel good when they leave the house. Ideas can be their own form of luxury, of course, but his Self-Portrait customers are shopping for well-made and well-priced clothes, not the concepts behind them. This is a refreshingâand perhaps even radicalâapproach: Fashion is in the midst of a global luxury slowdown where the material qualities of a garment are the inarguable markers of worth.
When previewing his fall collection, Chong immediately drew attention to a suite of georgette columns weighed down in clusters of hand-embroidered crystals that will retail for no more than $600 in-store. Beside them hung a miniskirt-set in bronze-toned chainmail hand-scalloped with the same house lace used for long-line negligĂ©es. Each of the knitted piecesâranging from pastel cardigans with crocheted floral brooches, peplum sweaters, and taffeta-skirted dresses with embellished costume-jewel buttonsâwere also produced in Self-Portraitâs state-of-the-art manufacturing facilities in East Asia. âBecause our price points are so accessible, people assume there is a lack of craftsmanship involved,â the designer said. âThe truth is: we built the infrastructure to develop everything ourselves.â Which is to say nothing of the stigma that collects around the clothes being made in China, a nation with centuries of savoir-faire and the modern tech to rival even the most prestigious ateliers in Paris. âWe put a lot of effort into uplifting the craftsmanship this season,â said Chong. âPeople deserve value for money.â
There is value, too, in the sense of optimism these clothes will inject into peopleâs livesâamong them tweed shifts and crochet sets with serotonin-topping trims of pale-pink fuzz; chenille bodycon numbers that Chong described as having the structural properties of shapewear; and a pussy-bow twist on a lamĂ© maxi dress which has proved almost as popular as last springâs hot pants. âPeople want to get laid,â Chong said, with a laugh. âBut we canât just design for the adventurous types.â A series of double-breasted midi dresses and power-shouldered suede button-downs will be better suited to those on the demure end of Self-Portraitâs global audience. âThe message is similar each season,â said Chong. âThe question is: âHow can we build on the blueprint and perfect our customerâs wardrobe through subtle details?â Itâs never about what I want to design. Itâs about catering to her everyday life.â