Dressing & Archives
Ready-to-wear
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Alain Paul develops a unisex wardrobe at the intersection of conceptual design, minimalism, and a sustainable approach to creation. The brand designs a large part of its pieces in-house, asserting an exacting, precise, and resolutely contemporary vision of clothing.
Nona Source x Alain Paul Studio
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Alphonse Maitrepierre continues his collaboration with Nona Source by working with high-quality circular materials sourced from luxury Maisons, notably through his violet Alcantara coat, which have become emblematic of his collections. His vision elevates unsold materials, waiting to reveal their full potential.
Nona Source x Alphonse Maitrepierre
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Le Bon Marché Maison Rive Gauche was one of the first partners to believe in Nona Source and embrace eco-design. Between 2024 and 2025, this shared commitment led to the reuse of more than 14 kilometres of fabric, transformed into unique ready-to-wear pieces and accessories. A collaboration that reflects a common vision for more responsible creation.
Nona Source x Le Bon Marché
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Candice Fauchon offers a collection of luxury loungewear. This wardrobe highlights her “Le Edo” kimono, made from navy wool and cotton poplin.
Nona Source x Candice Fauchon
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Cecilie Bahnsen, one of Nona Source’s earliest ambassadors, has been showcasing our fabrics on Fashion Week runways, while also developing capsule collaborations dedicated to our materials. In this dressing room, she presents a sheer silk organza dress, celebrating exceptional fabrics through a more responsible approach to creation.
Nona Source x Cecilie Bahnsen
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GAUCHERE, which has placed its trust in Nona Source for several years, creates a contemporary minimalist wardrobe at the crossroads of formal and relaxed influences. Through an exacting approach, the house elevates deadstock and reveals its full potential with unmistakable refinement. Among the selected materials is a premium faux leather sourced from Nona Source.
Nona Source x Gauchère
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Hast, a French menswear brand renowned for its premium wardrobe, showcases Nona Source materials in their full integrity, from raw silk and radzimir to striped poplin and lightweight Japanese wool. By placing existing materials at the starting point of the creative process, this partnership overturns traditional design logic and paves the way for a more conscious approach to clothing. This space unveils a selection of pieces from the latest collection, Acte IV, reflecting a shared vision shaped by exacting standards, modernity, and a keen sensitivity to materials.
Nona Source x Hast
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Jeanne Friot uses fashion as a powerful vehicle to support and celebrate the LGBTQIA+ community, turning each piece into a statement of identity and inclusion. In the wardrobe curated for Nona Source’s fifth anniversary, she presents a jacket crafted from Dry Virgin Wool Tartan.
Nona Source x Jeanne Friot
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Julie de Libran was among the very first designers to weave Nona Source materials into her collections, giving new life to exceptional fabrics through her singular couture vision.
Within the wardrobe, two creations from her Haute Couture collections stand out in particular: an ethereal white lace gown with a delicate leopard motif and rich texture, alongside a black lace dress of striking elegance.
Nona Source x Julie de Libran
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Kevin Germanier elevates upcycled luxury fabrics sourced from unsold LVMH garments, enhanced with beads, recycled bottle fragments, and hand-crafted embroidery. For this creation, he transformed our floral viscose and cotton lace into a spectacular white bridal veil.
Nona Source x Kevin Germanier
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The versatility of Nona Source materials is explored and elevated by Louis Vuitton, which uses deadstock fabrics to create uniforms for its teams. This approach highlights both the Maison’s efforts to embrace more circular production methods and the richness of collaborations between the Maisons.
Nona Source x Louis Vuitton
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For its Monoprix Atelier collection, Monoprix selected Nona Source fabrics to create a premium capsule made from deadstock. This collaboration demonstrates that circularity can also inspire creation on a larger scale, without ever compromising on quality or desirability.
Nona Source x Monoprix
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Rave Review presents a black dress made from lace, showcasing a material approach that is both bold and delicate. The piece reflects the brand’s sustainable design ethos, where textile reuse becomes a true field of creative expression.
Nona Source x Rave Review
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Stella McCartney was one of the pioneers to champion the use of Nona Source fabrics. Through her longstanding commitment, she demonstrates that circularity can be not only desirable, but also embraced at scale. In this space, a coat from one of her collections embodies that vision: a statement piece where stylistic rigor, innovation, and responsibility come together.
Nona Source x Stella McCartney
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A longstanding partner of Nona Source, Steven Passaro elevates exceptional leather through an olive green leather jacket with controlled volume and precise tailoring, revealing the full strength of these materials in distinctive, assertive creations.
Nona Source x Steven Passaro
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Vaillant Studio draws on fabrics sourced from Nona Source to shape a bold and desirable Parisian wardrobe. A powerful demonstration that deadstock can become the foundation of a contemporary, creative, and highly desirable fashion vision.
Nona Source x Vaillant Studio
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Nona Source has collaborated with Weinsanto since the platform’s inception. For this evening, the designer presents a black gown adorned with integrated pearls, combining sophistication with an exquisite sense of detail. Through his extravagant, burlesque creative universe, Weinsanto offers a compelling expression of the infinite creative possibilities unlocked by circular materials.
Nona Source x Victor Weinsanto
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Zomer draws on Nona Source materials throughout its collections, weaving them into a distinctive wardrobe where color, contrast, and freedom of expression take center stage. The latest collection offers a new illustration of this approach with a purple, green, and white striped sweater, as well as a red cotton gabardine bomber jacket, two pieces that reveal the creative power of existing materials.