This collection is about women. Wonderful women.

Warriors, creators, writers, activists, artists. Fighters for women's rights. We put a special interest in those who had to face a double oppression, that of gender and race.

"I assure you that someone will remember us in the future."

Sappho of Lesbos, poetess.

Garments to dress the daily journey of our customers. To make them feel powerful on a daily basis.

Comfortable, light and versatile fabrics.

Style, trend, sustainability.

You'll find it all in the new FW23/24 season.

The authenticity and elegance that characterizes this collection has been created for all Wonder Women. Garments inspired by wonderful women who initiated changes in society so that we could have the rights that belong to us, and that they did not have.

Lisístrata

Lysistrata.

It represents the triumph of reason and female dialogue.

Greek women, fed up with seeing their husbands leave and die in the war, started a sex strike.






A gesture that proved to be a negotiation tool and a fight for egalitarian values.

Empowerment, respect, admiration.





Elizabeth Catlett

Artist and feminist. She became one of the most important artistic references for African-American women.

Insatiable fighter for human rights and progressive causes.




We take as a reference this figure, who as a result of his experiences, created and developed his own identity. As unique as this collection is.

We captured his entire journey and we draw on his inspiration to create garments with green and brown tones.

Ángela Davis

How to introduce her?

Fighter for civil rights, against racial discrimination, feminist, beautiful...

Author of "Women Race and Class" and more than 10 books.

Garments in shades of red, pink, purple and orange. All a source of inspiration for this season's clothing.

"Feminism that is not anti-racist and in solidarity with those who are trapped in poverty because of global capitalism is a contradiction in terms," she concludes.

Wayuu

Wayuu women. Wise women weavers inhabit Guajira. Recognized for their power and for inheriting the knowledge of a being half spider (weaving) and half woman. WALE KERU.

Their weavings have a very different meaning of art. Each drawing that they weave in the bags and backpacks has its reason. They are geometric drawings closely linked to their environment. Hence the inspiration and prints of this collection.

Contrast

Women who had to dress like men in order to reach their goals without having to suffer the inequalities that this entails. They wore male clothes in order to develop their intellect or vocation, an option that, because of their sex, had been forbidden to them.

Contrast combats this. With black and white garments we eliminate the boundaries between male and female codes delimited by gender.

version movil

Garments to dress the daily journey of our customers. To make them feel powerful on a daily basis.

Style, trend, sustainability.

You'll find it all in the new FW23/24 season.

Lisístrata

It represents the triumph of reason and female dialogue.

Greek women, fed up with seeing their husbands leave and die in the war, initiated a sex strike.

A gesture that proved to be a negotiation tool and a struggle for egalitarian values.



Elizabeth Catlett

Artist and feminist, she became one of the most important artistic references for African-American women.

Insatiable fighter for human rights and progressive causes.

Ángela Davis

A fighter for civil rights, against racial discrimination, feminist, beautiful....

"Feminism that is not anti-racist and in solidarity with those trapped in poverty because of global capitalism is a contradiction in terms," she concludes.

Wayuu

Wayuu women. Wise women weavers inhabit Guajira. Recognized for their power and for inheriting the knowledge of a being half spider (weaving) and half woman.

WALE KERU.

Their weavings have a very different meaning of art. Each drawing that they weave in the bags and backpacks has its reason. They are geometric drawings closely linked to their environment.

Hence the inspiration and prints of this collection.

Contrast

Women who had to dress like men in order to reach their goals without having to suffer the inequalities that this entails.

They wore male clothes in order to develop their intellect or vocation, an option that, because of their sex, had been forbidden to them.

Contrast combats this. With black and white garments we eliminate the boundaries between male and female codes delimited by gender.