Thirty years don’t come around every day. For most brands, three decades might feel like a weight, an archive of heritage that’s hard to move. For Minä Perhonen, however, it’s the opposite: it’s the engine that drives a new form of nostalgia. Not the worn-out kind that lives in repetition, but one that feels like a fresh wind brushing against memories never actually lived. A paradox that Akira Minagawa, founder and creative soul of the Japanese house, turns into visual and tactile language in the new Autumn/Winter 2025-26 collection.
The title is no accident: A new kind of nostalgia opens a portal between past and future. The garments breathe that intersection that can only be reached when craftsmanship is so solid it can afford to play with the intangible. The collection is a journey, yes, but not a round trip; it’s a path that looks in the rear-view mirror while accelerating toward the unknown. In every seam there’s a dialogue between memory and discovery, between the caress of a familiar fabric and the intrigue of an unexpected pattern.
Minä Perhonen has built its reputation on unique textiles and an unshakable commitment to craftsmanship. This season, that commitment feels elevated to a ritual. The fabrics seem to hold time itself, as if each thread were infused with ancient stories and new promises. It’s no coincidence that this project arrives on the brand’s 30th anniversary: within it lies a meditation on what it means to create in the present while nurturing what has been sown over three decades.
The collection offers soft, enveloping silhouettes that embrace the body without imposing on it. The colors—deep, earthy, yet crossed with unexpected flashes—evoke the palette of an infinite autumn, one that doesn’t belong to a specific year but to all the autumns we’ve lived or imagined. The textures invite touch and to be touched: wools that feel like inherited blankets, embroideries that resemble memories turned into drawings, jacquards that speak in a quiet voice.
Conceptually, A new kind of nostalgia is also a manifesto. Minagawa is unafraid to say that the future of fashion lies in a more conscious relationship with the past. The collection sidesteps the trap of superficial “retro” and instead opts for something deeper: continuity. Designs unbound by the tyranny of fast seasons, pieces to inhabit and revisit.
Minä Perhonen’s forward gaze doesn’t reject tradition; it incorporates it as a living ingredient. In the garments of this autumn/winter there are echoes of the brand’s earliest sketches, filtered through three decades of textile and cultural exploration. One can sense the influence of Minagawa’s love for nature—rooted in his connections with Finland—and a renewed interest in the micro-stories hidden in the everyday.
Photographed by Keita Goto, the campaign doesn’t aim to show clothing as a product, but as an atmosphere. The images capture that liminal state between seasons, when the air changes and shadows grow longer. It is there, in that suspended moment, where “new nostalgia” finds its form.
Ultimately, Minä Perhonen celebrates 30 years not with a greatest hits album, but with a new record that already feels like a classic. A collection that proves the most powerful fashion is not the one shouting trends, but the one whispering timeless truths. In their hands, nostalgia stops being a refuge and becomes fertile ground for creation.

