Updated
Updated · Vanity Fair · Jul 8
Robert Wun Unveils Child's Play Couture in Paris as 35% to 40% of Sales Go to Collectors
Updated
Updated · Vanity Fair · Jul 8

Robert Wun Unveils Child's Play Couture in Paris as 35% to 40% of Sales Go to Collectors

3 articles · Updated · Vanity Fair · Jul 8

Summary

  • Robert Wun used Paris Haute Couture Week to present a child’s play-inspired collection of primary colors, ballooned silhouettes and fairy-tale references, leaning fully into the playful pop identity that now sets him apart on the schedule.
  • The Hong Kong-born, London-based designer said that outsider status gives him freedom from couture’s traditional stiffness, a stance that has helped turn his once-dismissed “clown couture” into a standout draw.
  • Nine Met Gala guests wore Wun in 2026, including Lisa and Naomi Osaka, while the Costume Institute acquired two of his looks after curator Andrew Bolton met him last summer.
  • Wun said his business now extends beyond celebrity dressing to private clients led by the US, then China and the Middle East, with 35% to 40% of sales coming from art collectors who buy the pieces as artworks.
  • His rise as the first Hong Kong designer on the Paris couture calendar also reflects a broader shift in the week, where newer names from outside the traditional fashion capitals are gaining ground through celebrity backing and private clientele.

Insights

Is the rise of celebrity-backed 'pop couturiers' a sustainable evolution for high fashion or a threat to its traditional artistry?
With Indian and Gulf patrons backing their own designers, is a new global fashion power structure emerging outside of European control?