SPRING 26
the good old days
Spring Summer 2026

SPRING SUMMER 26
FINE DAYS
20th Anniversary.
In the relentless pursuit of fashion, twenty years is a good time to look back and contemplate what has been achieved. The successes. The failures. What almost worked. The pieces to which we always return, stubbornly. For this collection, I'm drawing from my iconic pieces, remixing them, and preparing next summer's hit for you.


our handcrafted pieces
Tie-Dye, an Ancient Craft
Originating from various cultures and regions around the world, Tie-Dye has a rich history of craftsmanship passed down from generation to generation. At VdeVinster, we produce our Tie-Dyes in Rajasthan, India, where talented artisans have perfected their techniques over centuries.

The creator
Virginie de Vinster is atypical. Her own university was Africa, where she worked for 15 years. His apprenticeship, travels across the Sahel, Ivory Coast, Benin, Togo, Ghana.
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TRAVELS
For 20 years, her philosophy has been to make each garment a story, like a travel journal that inspires a taste for elsewhere and for others… and, incidentally, makes one beautiful.

Ethically handmade
Her challenge is to create garments using ancient materials and processes, such as her tie-dye prints or block prints on long silk dresses, her thread and bead embroidery on the cuffs of balloon sleeves, her Himalayan pashmina blouses, her ikat fabrics, another dyeing and tying process…
"Her long tie-dye or 'ikat' print dresses, her hand-dyed silk jackets, her pashmina blouses, her shirts with embroidered sleeves... are all invitations to travel."
"Hand weaving, embroidery, natural materials... With her eponymous brand, Virginie reappropriates and modernizes ancestral know-how. Slow good!"

“The belted vest in natural wool from the fall winter 2021 season makes an appearance in an editorial in Vogue Paris number 1020.”
"The light blouse, worn next to the skin or cool as an overshirt, it has established itself as the new essential of the season."

“Quilted fabric leaves its bourgeois countryside and appears as one of the essential textures of the urban wardrobe.”




















