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Jakarta Fashion Week 2025: Southeast Asia Has Entered Its Confident Era

From Jakarta’s runways to the wider Southeast Asian conversation, Jakarta Fashion Week 2025 revealed a region no longer seeking validation, but only expression.

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The air in Indonesia was charged when MEGA attended the event as an official international media partner. Beneath the veneer of the runway, a shared language of Southeast Asian artistry finds its way in a changing world. At Jakarta Fashion Week 2025, fashion was an act of geography and connection. But, there’s no singular “look” here—only perspective, instinct, and heat.

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Day 1

MASSHIRO ATORIE × ROUNN
MASSHIRO ATORIE × ROUNN
MASSHIRO ATORIE × ROUNN
NAGITA SLAVINA × VONE
NAGITA SLAVINA × VONE
NAGITA SLAVINA × VONE
BUTTONSCARVES
BUTTONSCARVES
BUTTONSCARVES
BIASA
BIASA
BIASA
STUDIO MORAL
STUDIO MORAL
STUDIO MORAL
NADJANI
NADJANI
NADJANI
CALLA
CALLA
CALLA

The week opened with “Jakarta Via Paris”, a showcase that bridged two worlds: Indonesian designers who had shown at Tranoï in Paris returning to their own soil. MASSHIRO ATORIE × ROUNN, NAGITA SLAVINA × VONE, BUTTONSCARVES, BIASA, STUDIO MORAL, NADJANI, and CALLA wove familiarity with global polish, suggesting that what is “modern” need not come from elsewhere. The collections spoke in fluent contrasts: a cosmopolitan look grounded in Indonesian restraint.

Rama Dauhan Gold
Rama Dauhan Gold
Rama Dauhan Gold
Didi Budiardjo
Didi Budiardjo
Didi Budiardjo

Later that day, “The Love Letter” by InterContinental Jakarta Pondok Indah and IFDC (Rama Dauhan Gold and Didi Budiardjo) blossomed: wedding whites, off-whites, and the tiniest hint of beige cascading into rosettes and pleats. Then, like a lipstick-signed love note, a single red stripe emerged. This nation was demonstrating to the rest of the world that beauty and love, even in their grandiose manifestations, can always dominate a stage.

Day 2 

By the second day, Jakarta had found its rhythm, luminous in its presence.

christie basil
christie basil
christie basil
Jan sober
jan sober
jan sober
Studio JEJE
STUDIO JEJE
STUDIO JEJE

Christie Basil opened with an ode to radiance, layering fabric like emotions —  light and meaning were inspired, quite tenderly, by the anatomy of an onion. Jan Sober followed in full force, tailoring every line to precision, with textural accents here and there; a collection glowing with a confidence that burns slow, but steady. Studio Jeje then shifted the palette to a dreamier place—pastels and shimmer, playful yet poised, as if youth had learned how to speak fashion as its first word.

Tangan privé
TANGAN Privé
TANGAN Privé
KRATON Auguste Soesastro
KRATON Auguste Soesastro
KRATON Auguste Soesastro
TOTON
TOTON
TOTON

The night culminated in “DEWI Fashion Knights”, where TANGAN Privé, KRATON Auguste Soesastro, and TOTON reimagined heritage as fabrics that belonged to the past, now walking toward a future of their own making. It was the variety that serves as an instance that Southeast Asia interprets the world rather than copying it.

Day 3

On the third day, “ASEAN Fashion Parade” brought the region together.

Frederick Lee
Frederick Lee
Frederick Lee

Frederick Lee from Singapore staged a darkly poetic fantasy: feathers, florals, and elongated silhouettes that seemed to reach beyond the tangible. 

Rizman Ruzaini
Rizman Ruzaini
Rizman Ruzaini

Rizman Ruzaini from Malaysia answered with an opulent calm—fluid skirts, glittering gowns, and a grandeur steeped in tradition. 

Francis libiran
Francis libiran
Francis libiran


Among them, the Philippines’ Francis Libiran linked modern luxury with cultural identity, his maximalist sensibility taking flight in a vision that shimmered between heritage and innovation.

TULOLA
TULOLA
TULOLA
Sapto Djojokartiko
Sapto Djojokartiko
Sapto Djojokartiko
Sebastian Gunawan
Sebastian Gunawan
Sebastian Gunawan

Closing the week, “DEWI Fashion Knights” presented TULOLA, Sapto Djojokartiko, and Sebastian Gunawan—designers who redefined what it means to wear Indonesian heritage. Their collections carried the textures of the archipelago, reworked through contemporary form through gold threads and lace. 

The Regional Thread

Jakarta Fashion Week 2025 was essentially informed by heat, by humidity, by history; by faith and folklore; by the sound of traffic outside every atelier and the feel of the sun on woven cloth. What the region offers isn’t imitation or competition, but the perspective that we are not alone. 

In an age where global fashion often feels like an echo chamber, Jakarta’s runways spoke in their own rhythm, where the act of dressing became a kind of cultural translation. The West will endure, but the Asian world is already in full stride — the rest of the world will simply have to catch up.


Photos courtesy of JAKARTA FASHION WEEK

Sean Castelo III

Sean Castelo III

Editor

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