Richert Beil‘s Fall/Winter 2026 collection, LANDEl, is built on a conscious distance from fashion as spectacle and from systems that value only scale and speed.

LANDEl is about a slower relationship with clothing. The inspiration comes from a formative experience where fashion was not an omnipresent force. It was something observed from a distance, studied and imagined. In that space, garments became objects of desire and meaning. The collection contrasts this mode of engagement with today’s conditions, where success is often measured by algorithmic visibility and rapid replication.

This reflection is grounded in a physical space. The brand recently moved its studio into a renovated 135-year-old pharmacy. The historical layers and functional logic of this building inform the collection’s approach to working with time.

The collection proposes fashion as a space of concentration. It questions systems that sacrifice creative depth for constant output. It does not ignore economic reality, but resists models that erase individual voice. The goal is to establish a sustainable inner structure for work, one that is not fully subordinated to market logic.

Sustainability here is a cultural stance, not just a communication tool. It is practiced through long-lasting materials, precise construction, and garments designed to remain relevant beyond a single season. At its core, LANDEl addresses a loss: the loss of attention and autonomy, not just toward objects, but toward the time required to develop ideas.

Check out the collection presented during Berlin Fashion Week: