
2020s · 2010s · Belgian
Designer
Bruno Pieters
Production
ready-to-wear
Material
cotton polyester blend
Culture
Belgian
Movement
Sustainable Fashion · Dopamine Dressing
Influences
sustainable fashion movement · contemporary menswear proportions
A contemporary two-piece suit featuring a relaxed-fit blazer and cropped wide-leg trousers. The jacket displays structured shoulders with notched lapels and appears to have a single-breasted closure. The garment showcases an intricate jacquard weave creating a complex multicolored pattern with geometric and possibly text-based motifs in reds, blues, and other hues against white sections. The trousers are cut wide through the leg with a cropped length ending above the ankle. The overall silhouette reflects 2010s sustainable fashion design, combining traditional tailoring techniques with contemporary proportions and innovative textile design that creates visual interest through pattern rather than embellishment.
Both pieces speak the same language of geometric abstraction, but with thirty years of sustainable fashion evolution between them. The 1990s Italian blouse uses its orange fiber-silk blend to create a sharp, almost architectural interplay of black and white geometric forms that feel crisp and digital, while the 2020s Belgian suit deploys a riot of multicolored abstract patterns across both blazer and trousers—a maximalist approach that turns sustainability into spectacle.
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These two pieces trace sustainable fashion's evolution from stealth to spectacle. The 1990s British hoodie dress whispers its eco-credentials through its recycled fleece fabrication and deliberately anti-fashion silhouette — sustainability as quiet rebellion against the industry's excess.
These two pieces reveal how sustainability became fashion's great democratizer, erasing the old hierarchies between high and low. The Belgian suit's intricate jacquard weave transforms what appears to be upcycled text and imagery into a structured blazer that could walk into any boardroom, while the American puffer takes the utilitarian promise of warmth and strips it down to pure function in that traffic-cone orange.