Maison MIHARA YASUHIRO’s AW25 collection flips tailoring on its head—think pants as sleeves, sculptural accessories, and raw-edged silhouettes. A bold remix of tradition and streetwear, where nothing is quite as it seems.
Sleeves Made from Pants, Upside-Down Jackets, and Dinosaur Bags—This Is Fashion That Dares to Break Every Rule (and Still Looks Incredible)
For Autumn/Winter 2025, Maison MIHARA YASUHIRO reimagines what tailoring can look like, pulling from the brand’s roots while turning traditional silhouettes on their head. Known for blending streetwear influences with conceptual design, the label delivers a collection that feels bold, unconventional, and yet completely on brand.


This collection leans into dramatic proportions and layered silhouettes, with denim, outerwear, and tailoring all reworked in unexpected ways. Pants turned into sleeves, jackets are flipped and spliced, and classic shapes are pulled apart and reassembled with a raw edge. The result is intentionally offbeat, but still feels polished and considered.


Texture is a key element throughout the collection. Distressed knits, faux fur fringe, and layered fabrics add depth to a mostly dark, neutral palette. Playful accessories inject moments of fun; sculptural, animal-shaped handbags (like a black T-Rex or a metallic triceratops) lend a surreal, almost cartoonish twist that softens the collection’s brooding undertone with something unexpected and lighthearted.


The brand also introduced OLIVER, a new sneaker silhouette made in collaboration with AUTRY and General Scale. Inspired by AUTRY’s classic Medalist style and finished with a worn-in, vintage aesthetic, the shoe captures MIHARA YASUHIRO’s continued exploration of pieces that feel enduring, but never conventional.

At its core, the AW25 collection is about taking familiar shapes and making them feel new again. Tailoring is the starting point, but where it ends up is totally unexpected.
About the Author:
I’m a New York based fashion writer and PR strategist with over seven years at leading agencies, working across luxury, ready-to-wear, footwear, and jewelry.
Now fully freelance, I serve as Fashion Editor at StyleLujo.com where I cover womenswear across all categories, with a focus on the intersection of design, culture, and commerce.
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