Fashion Women's Fashion

Copenhagen Fashion Week Moments That Are About To Define Your Summer Wardrobe

Views: 119

From its vivid patchwork of canal-side townhouses to its effortlessly chic and impossibly good-looking cyclists, Copenhagen is an international city with an immediately identifiable aesthetic signature. And it’s this blend of whimsical cosmopolitanism that has made Copenhagen Fashion Week one of the more exciting international fashion weeks on the agenda, striking a balance between cutting-edge emerging designers and clothes people can actually… see themselves wearing. 

The Spring Summer 2026 shows are now underway, and the streets are filling impeccably and eclectically dressed Danes and international media arriving to soak it all up. 

This season, which runs from August 4 to eight, will feature 44 brands, including OpéraSPORT, Baum Pferdgarten, Caro Editions, Rotate and rising fashion darling Bonnetje.  

Related: Copenhagen Fashion Week Moments That Are About To Define Your Summer Wardrobe

Danish style has a particular alignment with an Australian attitude to dressing. As in most countries that brave harsh winters, there’s an unbridled enthusiasm for warmer weather, but no city expresses this sartorially quite like Copenhagen. From the dedication to flip-flops, worn cycling, dining out and on the runway to the distinctive sunny-Scandi yellow that brightens the streets, Danish style flourishes under the country’s clear blue summer skies. And that’s lucky for us because the trends we see on the runway will transition seamlessly onto our Australian spring/summer moodboards, so from  OpéraSPORT’s cool girl take on resort wear to Bonnetje’s subversive office sirens, we’ll be tracking moments that will indicate what we’ll be wearing for summer. 

Related: I Went To Europe And Everyone Was Wearing This Aussie Shoe Staple

OpéraSPORT: Pool Goth

At Opera Sport
Image: Getty
At Opera Sport
Image: Getty

It’s summer in Copenhagen and at  OpéraSPORT, designers Awa Malina Stelter and Stephanie Gunelach committed to the bit with a poolside runway at the city’s Frederiksberg Badene facility.  OpéraSPORT opened the season and has come to be considered one of the most exciting brands in Copenhagen. The looks were inspired by the founder’s recent trip to Seoul, a restrained take on resort dressing with tones of butter yellow, cool sage, and a kaleidoscope of unconventional blues, which, if OperaSPORT has anything to say about it, will be the colour way of the summer.

At Opera Sport
Image: Getty
At Opera Sport
Image: Getty

The brand partnered with Brazilian footwear label Havaianas, which is currently enjoying a renaissance among fashion insiders, to create bulbous, 3D-printed flip-flops. Icy blue floral appliques adorned swimsuits, and gauzy sculptural shawls were wrapped around shoulders beneath navy leather jackets. Headscarves, a trend that’s ramping up, were sheer with sparkling floral appliques, and models carried gauzy black beach bags. The commitment to cool tones and the unexpected silhouettes on traditional resortwear garments made for a moment that felt slightly futuristic – summer vacation wear for citizens of the uncanny valley.  All we know is the cool girls will be wearing cool tones on the beaches this summer. 

Bonnetje: An Office Affair

At Bonnetje
Image: Getty
At Bonnetje
Image: Getty

Lingerie and fine tailoring have always been among fashion’s favourite studies in contrast. There’s something arrestingly suggestive about a borrowed-from-the-boys blazer layered over a delicate negligee, or a trench that visually plays with masculinity and femininity, hinting at a slightly scandalous morning-after narrative.

Bonnetje founders, Danish design duo Anna Myntekær and Yoko Maja Rahbek Hansen, have built their aesthetic on deconstructed and upcycled suiting—taking the uniforms of our “clock-in, clock-out” culture and reassembling them into something unsettling, intriguing, and—in their SS26 show “Breakable”—provocatively sexy.

At Bonnetje
Image: Getty
At Bonnetje
Image: Getty

This season, the duo were inspired by two duelling human qualities: flexibility and breakability, both heightened by our rapidly changing world. They gravitated toward the symbolic qualities of glass—hard and sharp yet transparent and fragile. Our clothing forms the interface between us and our surroundings (never more so than when armouring up for corporate life), and on the Bonnetje runway, this protective facade was breaking down. Fine tailoring and corporate-core styling have dominated 2025, offering a sartorial shield in uncertain times. The question asked at Bonnetje seemed to be: are we evolving? Or are we unravelling?

Guests filtering into the space were met with a room full of pink champagne and maraschino cherries in glasses of varying sizes, while the tinkling of ethereal bells in the background was occasionally interrupted by the explosive sounds of crashing glass. 

Bonnetje
Image: Getty
Bonnetje
Image: Getty

Models wore sharp-shouldered overcoats reminiscent of Michael Douglas in his iconic 1980s thrillers. But while the outerwear spoke to a Wolf of Wall Street bravado, the layers beneath echoed the style of on-the-edge heroines from films like Fatal Attraction and Basic Instinct. Sharon Stone’s murderous Catherine Tramell wouldn’t have looked out of place in this collection, with dresses featuring plissé detailing, raw hems, and fringed linings. Skirt suits appeared to unravel mid-stride, revealing fluid silk underlayers, and masculine finishes were accented by feminine rosettes—speaking to the paranoid, dangerously infatuated energy embodied by Glenn Close’s career woman. Beauty looks amplified this sense of angst, with pearlescent faux glitter tears and smudged mascara running down models’ glossy cheeks.

Individual pieces were surprisingly wearable, from floaty slip dresses perfect for the cool girl eschewing pastel for summer soirées, to sharp-shouldered blazers and asymmetric shirts that felt very The Row-inspired.

Though angular and deconstructed in design, the materials retained a fluidity, moving gracefully with models as they navigated the runway. Accessories included sturdy and sensible court shoes, practical and distinctly 80s office-appropriate pumps, with impractical glass handbags. A gesture that felt like a wry joke to those following along in the front row.   

Caro Editions: Headscarves And Bows Galore

At Caro Editions
Image: Courtesy of Caro Editions
At Caro Editions
Image: Courtesy of Caro Editions

Caro Editions won the best soundtrack award early on, with designer Caroline Bile Brahe opting for a mix of Bikini Kill, Peaches, Sophie Ellis-Bextor, and Doechii. 

The inspiration for the show was a recreation of the designer’s own 2018 wedding, which brought 300 guests, comprised of friends, family and almost the entirety of Copenhagen’s creative community together. 

Caro Editions
Image: Courtesy of Caro Editions
At Caro Editions
Image: Courtesy of Caro Editions

As at their wedding, guests sipped pink champagne (the beverage du jour in Denmark’s most colourful city) and held a ceremony under a bridge before they were transported by boat to the after-party. The baker La Glace, who made the couple’s original wedding cake, created a four-story confection for the runway, which felt more like an event. 

But what about the actual clothes? Unsurprisingly, the collection included some bridal looks, but the majority of the pieces were created with wedding guests in mind, and there were bows everywhere. But not of the “girlhood” TikTok variety, these were Hugh Grant Four Weddings and A Funeral-era 80s rom com bows, the kind the ever-present eccentric single sister might wear when she catches the wedding bouquet and hooks up with the weird friend. Said bows and adorned everything from dresses to bags (designed in collaboration with Mulberry). With a Scandi eye to sustainability, Brahe drew on deadstock materials sourced from exclusive Paris ateliers, and raw silk was a tantalisingly tactile textural throughline.

At Caro Editions
Image: Courtesy of Caro Editions
At Caro Editions
Image: Courtesy of Caro Editions

While the rest of the world is still in the Y2K paddling pool, if the Danes have anything to do with it, the 80s will be making a comeback. Gigantic bows, puff sleeves, plaids in unexpected colour ways (think Yves Klein Blue and a green as neon as your primary school highlighter) and polkadots were all over the runway. And although we might not run marathons in the beribboned New Balance sneakers that made an appearance, it seems entirely plausible that Copenhagen’s famously expert cyclists will find a way to pedal gracefully in them.

The post Copenhagen Fashion Week Moments That Are About To Define Your Summer Wardrobe appeared first on ELLE.

Continue Reading

You may also like...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

five − two =