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Break.fast: The human-first showroom rewriting fashion rules

Break.fast: The human-first showroom rewriting fashion rules

Fashion Network16-07-2025
Paris men's fashion week in late June was packed with showrooms, but one space drew particular attention. At 14 Avenue Parmentier, inside the airy Consulat Voltaire, Break.fast introduced a curated vision where fashion, futurism, and human values converge.
Founder Alina Zaporozcenko welcomed FashionNetwork.com between back-to-back appointments, surrounded by travel cases and creative momentum. A Polimoda graduate with a background in international business development, she began her career at Burberry and the Tomorrow showroom before joining the team at Vêtements. It was there, in account management, that the concept behind Break.fast quietly started to form.
Reshaping fashion with stability and intention
Influenced by the underground attitude of Vêtements and the commercial structure of Tomorrow, Break.fast launched in 2019 as both a multi-brand showroom and agent. Today, it represents 10 emerging labels personally selected by Zaporozcenko, who is just as deliberate about team culture as she is about her client roster.
'My mission is to create a space where people can thrive—not just designers, but staff too,' she said. 'There's so much competition in this industry. I want Break.fast to be a stable, rewarding place.'
Zaporozcenko is also challenging the industry's outdated rhythms—starting with the seasonal calendar. 'We keep working with this idea of seasons, but the seasons are disappearing,' she said. 'No one wants to churn out constant newness, but they're pressured to. Why not rethink the timing of fashion altogether?'
Curated cool: From dystopian aesthetics to wearable art
Break.fast's designer roster is as progressive as its approach. The labels it represents—including Carnet-Archive, Mosha Popova, and RUIbuilt—share a focus on identity and individuality rather than trend. 'Uniqueness is a brand's biggest selling point,' said Zaporozcenko.
While the European market remains cautious, and many showrooms lean conservative, Break.fast continues to strike a balance between edge and commercial viability. Zaporozcenko keeps her roster capped at 12 to maintain meaningful partnerships. Three of those brands are on the verge of wider global visibility—including London-based label Liza Keane.
Liza Keane: Poetry in grunge
'Liza's label needs real support,' said Zaporozcenko of the designer, who first caught attention with her poetic, moody graduation collection. Keane's dark, sculptural style merges avant-garde concepts with wearable simplicity, resulting in emotionally charged pieces produced in very limited runs.
Her latest collection, unveiled during Men's Week, explores themes of life and death. She was recently awarded the British Fashion Council 's NEWGEN support and is stocked by a growing list of international retailers including H. Lorenzo (Los Angeles), SSENSE and L'Oeuvre (Canada), D-mop (Hong Kong), Samplas and Opener (Seoul), and NOLM (Sydney).
Labels to watch: Lueder and Srvc
Also drawing attention is Lueder, the brand founded in 2019 by Marie Lueder. Her designs fuse medieval references with modern cuts, often featuring ribbed knits and pointed poulaines—elements that have earned support from both the British and German fashion councils. 'She gets a lot done with minimal resources,' said Zaporozcenko. 'That's the real fashion reality.'
Lueder is stocked by Machine-A (London), Opener, Boontheshop, Samplas and Galleria (Seoul), Radd Lounge and GR8 (Tokyo), Studio Slow (Kazan), and NOLM (Sydney).
Another name generating buzz is Srvc (short for 'Service'), founded by Ricky Wesley Harriott, formerly of Vêtements. Based in London, Srvc offers a daring, inclusive vision of womenswear—futuristic, sultry, and unafraid to challenge norms.
Srvc is now carried by key global stockists including Layers, Selfridges, and Machine-A (London); H. Lorenzo (Los Angeles); ansh46 (Rotterdam); FoS (Kuwait); Studio Slow (Russia); and several locations in Seoul and Tokyo.
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Stock investors expect rally as Europe clinches US trade deal
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Stock investors expect rally as Europe clinches US trade deal
Stock investors expect rally as Europe clinches US trade deal

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Stock investors expect rally as Europe clinches US trade deal
Stock investors expect rally as Europe clinches US trade deal

Fashion Network

time5 hours ago

  • Fashion Network

Stock investors expect rally as Europe clinches US trade deal

John Plassard, head of investment strategy at Cité Gestion, said the deal is 'good enough to unlock what equity markets needed most: visibility.' 'Tariff escalation risk is now off the table, and with that, a major macro overhang disappears. For investors, that's not just a sigh of relief, it's a green light,' he said. Euro Stoxx 50 futures will reopen for trading around 2 a.m. Paris time on Monday. Sectors most exposed to trade, including autos and consumer products, had outperformed Friday as investors were optimistic that an agreement would be reached before the Aug. 1 tariff deadline. European stocks have been range-bound since May due to jitters around the outlook for global trade. The benchmark Stoxx 600 is now 2.3% below its March record high. A UBS basket of stocks sensitive to tariffs has underperformed this year, suggesting there's room for the group to catch up to the broader regional benchmark. 'I do think there will be a relief rally as soon as the details are finalized, and this is a much needed shot in the arm for European stocks as earnings season is in full swing,' said Geoff Yu, a macro strategist for EMEA at BNY Mellon. Focus will be on carmakers, such as Stellantis NV, Volkswagen AG, Mercedes-Benz Group AG and BMW AG, as well as auto parts suppliers like Valeo SE, Forvia SE and Pirelli & C SpA. A gauge for the sector is flat on the year, missing out on Europe's broader rally. Investors will also be watching luxury goods makers including LVMH, Kering SA and Salvatore Ferragamo SpA, given North America is a significant market for the luxury sector. Drinks makers including Diageo Plc, Remy Cointreau and Pernod Ricard will be in focus, as well as shipping stocks such as A.P. Moller-Maersk A/S and Hapag-Lloyd AG, given freight's sensitivity to tariffs. Still, some investors warned that the rally could be short-lived until more details of the trade agreement are announced. 'There's a chance you see markets pick up in the morning and probably sell off again,' said Neil Birrell, chief investment officer at Premier Miton Investors. 'The devil will be in the detail, and it won't all be good for Europe and it won't all be good for the US.' Here's what other market participants are saying: Kallum Pickering, chief economist at Peel Hunt 'People want to bet that the US will strike a series of deals. They're not necessarily good deals, but uncertainty is worse. After we move up a little tomorrow in Europe, markets' attention will turn to Canada and Mexico. Any positive sign that they can strike deals like today's will be good enough for risk on.' Joachim Klement, strategist at Panmure Liberum 'Stock markets will likely rally on this news, but this can only be a sugar high. The fact is that Americans will pay higher tariffs from US imports and face an inflation surge and lower growth in the second half. The EU also faces higher tariffs than the UK, which gives UK exporters an advantage over their European competitors.' Michael Brown, senior research strategist at Pepperstone 'Stocks hardly need much of an excuse to rally right now, and the agreement not only removes a key left tail risk that the market had been concerned about, but also yet again reiterates that the direction of travel remains away from punchy rhetoric, and towards trade deals done. Rumours that the US-China trade truce will be extended for a further 90 days will also help on this front.' 'From a sectoral perspective, European automakers are one of the big winners here, with the 15% tariff also applying to auto imports into the States, a similar carve out to that achieved by Japan. Other obvious winners include US defense names given the EU's purchase commitments on that front, as well as US energy stocks, bearing in mind the almost $1 trillion of spend coming their way.' Mahmood Pradhan, global head of macro at Amundi Asset Management 'We'll probably get some sort of short-term relief rally in the morning, including more short covering. But given where we were pre-Liberation Day, this isn't good news for Europe. Longer-term, it will keep growth subdued in Europe.'

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