Connect with us

Fashion

Cecilie Bahnsen Is Still Key to Nailing the Beloved Scandi Girl Look

Published

on

Cecilie Bahnsen Is Still Key to Nailing the Beloved Scandi Girl Look

The day before Danish designer Cecilie Bahnsen hosted a breakfast during Copenhagen Fashion Week, celebrating the launch of her latest footwear collaboration with Asics, I received a package at my hotel.

It was a look from Bahnsen, lent to me to wear the following morning. But instead of opening the garment bag, I stared at it with a stupid grin on my face. The standard zipper was replaced with a row of crinkled white bows. Once I undid them, I found an ethereal top that was lined with more bows down the back.

Earlier, at her studio in Copenhagen, I’d asked Bahnsen about the internet’s seemingly never-ending obsession with bows. Bows are a detail she uses so frequently, they’re ingrained in every part of her design aesthetic, even in something as mundane as a garment bag. She laughed and said, “For me, it’s been how we always close our dresses. It’s how I do my finishings. From a really nerdy perspective, I don’t like a zipper! So that’s why we always put a bow. I think it’s way prettier!”

Bahnsen’s bows are conversation starters. Amongst fashion fans and anyone who loves to get dressed, they are easy to distinguish from other popular bows, like those by Sandy Liang or Simone Rocha. Bahnsen’s are thin and dainty and used to fasten her tops and dresses onto shoulders and hips. In the Danish capital, her hometown, they can be spotted everywhere, popping against the skin of bike riders in dresses and flip-flops. There is something quite sweet about her look. So sweet that at the Asics breakfast, a handful of fashion editors—many of whom the brand had dressed—described their looks as baby dresses. “It is something I could see my future daughter wearing to her baptism,” one joked to me. “But it’s also something I am wearing right now, and want to wear … forever.” The dress she was describing was long and pale yellow, with pleats and puffed sleeves that jetted out from the shoulders.

Kristy Sparow

Cecilie Bahnsen Fall/Winter 2022

paris, france march 02 editorial use only for non editorial use please seek approval from fashion house a model walks the runway during the cecilie bahnsen womenswear fallwinter 2022 2023 show as part of paris fashion week on march 02, 2022 in paris, france photo by kristy sparowgetty images

Kristy Sparow

Cecilie Bahnsen Fall/Winter 2022

This feminine aesthetic is how Bahnsen has always dressed. “Even as a kid, that’s how I loved to dress up. I’d always wear a big dress with my wellies! I think there’s a strength in embracing femininity. You can be yourself in that, and you can still be a businesswoman, or you can be a mom. You don’t have to be fragile,” she said, before quickly adding, “Or you can even be that! If you want to!”

paris, france september 27 editorial use only for non editorial use please seek approval from fashion house a model walks the runway during the cecilie bahnsen womenswear springsummer 2024 show as part of paris fashion week on september 27, 2023 in paris, france photo by kristy sparowgetty images

Kristy Sparow

Cecilie Bahnsen Spring/Summer 2024

paris, france september 27 editorial use only for non editorial use please seek approval from fashion house a model walks the runway during the cecilie bahnsen womenswear springsummer 2024 show as part of paris fashion week on september 27, 2023 in paris, france photo by pierre suugetty images

Pierre Suu

Cecilie Bahnsen Spring/Summer 2024

The designer’s favorite thing is to see how different women style her babydoll dresses and diaphanous peplum tops. “It’s more about this rich diversity even within femininity, and how they will wear things differently and put them together in a way that inspires me,” she told me. The signature Bahnsen look is certainly youthful, with an ease often only associated with being young and naive. You can throw on a Bahnsen look without much thought and look instantly cute, which is likely why grown-ups are so drawn to it. There is a bliss to her brand that is hard to bottle, and that most of us age out of when we become teens.

Despite being one of the biggest designers to come out of Copenhagen, Bahnsen hasn’t shown at Copenhagen Fashion Week since 2019. Instead, she has shown in Paris digitally since 2021, and physically since 2022. Bahnsen says it is because the brand found that a huge fraction of its customer base resides in the fashion capital. Regardless, her presence is felt all over Copenhagen Fashion Week, even without a runway.

Outside of the breakfast, Bahnsen told me, “We just had to do something this season!” In the coming weeks, the Cecilie Bahnsen × Asics Gel-Quantum 360 VIII—the brand’s third sneaker collaboration with technical sportswear brand Asics—will be available to shop. The sneaker, which will be the first-ever women’s model of the popular shoe, features silver fastenings in the shape of flowers. It has been reworked into a sandal, with straps across the top and back that allow for effortless styling with a good sock.

When I looked around at the breakfast, which was so highly attended that the crowd spilled onto the streets, I noted that a handful of guests were wearing the new Asics shoes with the expected pair of frilly socks. Everyone was dressed in at least one Cecilie Bahnsen piece, and although some women were wearing the same dress or top or skirt, you could barely even tell, because they were worn so differently. Some styled the babydoll dresses with striped shirts underneath and layers of chunky necklaces over top; others wore them sans anything, with their hair pinned up with a floral clip.

“I think that there’s a system to the community around the brand,” Bahnsen said. “Lots of friends wear it together … and you are inspiring each other and putting it on together and you dress up together!” Her universe is very feminine, of course, but she noted: “It still has a very Scandinavian touch to it! It has this balance between the romantic, the decadent, the feminine, but also something really minimalistic and functional.”

Standing in the middle of it all, amongst a crowd of Cecilie Bahnsen fangirls, I felt like I was part of a club—one that gladly welcomed me and required nothing for entry. And it really does feel like only Bahnsen could manage to create such a universe, one that can sustain itself in the city and its Fashion Week without a formal show.

“I feel like we’re all inside of a fairy tale,” one guest in a sheer bubbly white top said to me as she walked onto the street out of the café. Another, sipping on a coffee nearby, overheard and laughed, saying, “We’re really all just Bahnsen fairies.” Exactly.

Headshot of Tara Gonzalez

Tara Gonzalez is the Senior Fashion Editor at Harper’s Bazaar. Previously, she was the style writer at InStyle, founding commerce editor at Glamour, and fashion editor at Coveteur.

Continue Reading