Soft Toys Are Everywhere At Copenhagen Fashion Week. Vogue Investigates
If you need further evidence of how eclectic Copenhagen street style has become over the years, just look at the sheer amount of soft toy charms spotted on bags this season. From Hello Kitty to Minnie Mouse and Donald Duck, itâs the ultimate way to accessorise your accessories this season.
Whatâs behind this surge in popularity of soft toys? Well, as with many trends at the moment, all roads point to Miu Miu, which featured bag charms in its spring/summer 2024 collection. As ever, Vogueâs street-style photographer Acielle Tanbetova was ahead of the curve, after purchasing her Monchhichi monkey charm, which she attached to her vintage ChloĂ© Paddington bag, in Japan back in 2018. âTheyâre just so cute and also make your bag so personal,â she explains. â[My charms] all remind me of amazing memories, of a certain place.â
Scandi influencer Janka Polliani was spotted with an array of soft toy bag charms during Copenhagen Fashion Week.
Edward Berthelot/Getty Images
Yu Masui pictured with his bag charms in Copenhagen.
Acielle/ Style Du Monde
Soft toy charms have been everywhere at Copenhagen Fashion Week.
Jeremy Moeller/Getty Images
Many of the bag charms seen on the pavements of Copenhagen were purchased from Bag Crap, which was founded earlier this year by Amanda Marcuson and offers curated vintage keychains to its customers. âIn all honesty, Bag Crap started as a joke back in March,â the luxury handbag consignment expert explains. âI saw the bag charm trend really exploding on social media and thought it was equal parts obnoxious and hilarious in the best way possible. My thought was, what is the absolute dumbest thing I could put on my Birkin… a Barbie? A hot dog? What about a Barbie and a hot dog?â
Since then, the popularity of Bag Crap has exploded â with Marcuson, a long-time collector of bag charms, seeing it as an easy way to update accessories you already have in your wardrobe. âPeople are looking to refresh their handbags without having to make an entirely new purchase,â she says. âBag charms are a cost-effective way to bring a new life to a bag.â
(Di)visionâs soft toy coat from spring/summer 2025.
Umberto Fratini / Gorunway.com
(Di)vision spring/summer 2025.
Umberto Fratini / Gorunway.com
Given the heaviness of the news cycle right now, Vogue Franceâs fashion editor HĂ©loĂŻse Salessy â who owns a Miffy bag charm â sees the popularity of soft toys as a way of adding some joy to our wardrobes. âQuiet luxury is starting to fade, and we want to go back to something a bit more playful,â she reflects. âMaybe we are all a bit nostalgic, as we go through hard times.â
Indeed, this sense of nostalgia is why (Di)visionâs Simon Wick decided to create a showstopping coat made out of soft toys, as well as a bra, for his spring/summer 2025 collection. âI love toys,â the designer says. âThey bring so much uniqueness and personality to a look, [and] itâs just fun.â Who couldnât use a little more fun in their lives right now?