Willy Chavarria: ‘We’re stuck in fashion‘s old guard’

Willy Chavarria A/W 2025 runway show

As part of the August 2025 ‘Made in America’ issue of Wallpaper* we tasked three powerful voices from the worlds of design, fashion and architecture – Murray Moss, Willy Chavarria and Florencia Rodriguez – with delivering their own state of the nation address, speaking on themes of creativity and community in turbulent times. Here, Willy Chavarria – a fashion designer with an activist heart – talks creative resilience and shaking up fashion’s old guard.

My team and I approach every collection from a point of view of reacting to the political climate. The conversation is always: How does the world feel? What’s happening? How should we respond to it? Then we start pulling together ideas, thoughts and images – everything that’s inspiring us. For the latest A/W25 collection, which we showed in Paris earlier this year, there was a lot of civil rights imagery; strong, powerful figures from past and present. Everyone from Sinéad O’Connor to Indya Moore. These are people who are just gorgeous, but part of their beauty is their strength in speaking truth to power; they capture this feeling of resistance. The images reminded us all of how cool they are.

Willy Chavarria on shaking up fashion’s old guard

Willy Chavarria, photographed for Wallpaper* in 2024

(Image credit: Inez & Vinoodh)

The last six months have been such a dark time in America. It’s been heavy, very heavy. There are days when, in the studio, we just have to act as a support group, because some days feel unbelievable. The closer it gets to all of us, the scarier it feels. So something that we do – that the brand does – is that, aside from design, we’ve been working with organisations that are out there spending all of their time focusing on civil rights. We’ve developed close relationships with the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), and other organisations like that. We want to make sure that the work we do integrates their work – because when we are doing our jobs in design, we don’t always know the best way to organise. So having these groups that deal with this stuff every day is helpful.

‘If we can tell stories that really touch people through our art, then it has an impact. That’s what I’m trying to focus on’

Willy Chavarria

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