DATE: 16th June 2025. PLACE: Stazione Leopolda, Florence. TIME. 15.00
I:Filippo Fior / GoRunway
20 final year fashion students from Polimoda made their industry debut this week and unveiled some of the strongest collections from this years graduating students in Fashion Design 100 boundary-pushing looks this year. Ranging from sensitive to explosive and many radical and color-intensive points in between, the 20 collections of the graduating members of Polimod Class of 2025 strived to enjoy trying things out, instead of treating their final collection as a precious moment in time that they would look back to with stress. They used what they had; old materials, childhood memories, and lucid dreams.






My graduate collection explores the emotional journey of immigration through the lens of childhood. Having moved across countries since age 14, I’ve carried the weight of constant transition from a young age. The collection reflects the duality of this experience: the imaginative resilience of a child alongside the quiet complexities of migration. Silhouettes are playful and exaggerated, evoking curiosity, while a restrained color palette conveys introspection and longing. At its heart is “The Explorer,” a character who journeys the world in search of belonging. Through them, I explore identity, memory, and the ever-shifting meaning of home.






Farnia Salim








This collection began as an observation of individuality in Gothenburg – my first home after immigrating from Iran in 1999. I was struck by how quietly people moved through the rain, rarely speaking, even when sharing shelter. It felt distant, yet poetic. I viewed it all as an outsider, noticing how people prepared differently: the overprepared, the one in denial, the elegant, the careless. Rain became a metaphor for identity, emotion, and how we navigate the world – each commuter a character in a quiet urban play.










This collection was sparked by an online critique labelling my work “too feminine” to be menswear. That judgment stung – but it also pushed me to reflect on shame, identity, and the power of expression. I connected the experience to Pasolini’s Salò, where humiliation enforces control. Instead of conforming, I channelled that pain into creativity. for the boys is my response – a defiant, vulnerable reclamation of voice and freedom. It celebrates the right to exist authentically in art, regardless of gender norms.














Silenzio Bianco is inspired by Arctic exploration and the emotional distance within family heritage. I drew from the story of the expeditions of Fridtj of Nansen and traditional Inuit clothing, merging it with the rigid world of architecture, which reflects my paternal lineage. The collection explores silence as both a survival mechanism and a personal rebellion – a quiet confrontation between control and vulnerability, warmth and cold.












This collection began with a question my suited-up lawyer grandfather once asked me: “Would you wear that – if the airplane just might fall?” It sparked a reflection on how little value we place on things today. I drew inspiration from the evolution of air travel uniforms (pilots, air hostesses), classic menswear codes (like those of the Duke of Windsor), and ironic, literal references to flying. It’s about mortality, elegance, and absurdity all colliding in midair.

