HYPERAESTHETICS
Future Los Angeles
FW25 is now live on Hyperaesthetics.com.
As part of our speculative creative practice, we imagine a glimpse into the future where flying cars, our jackets, and running errands are apart of everyday life.

Devan wears our FW25 Mach-2 Moto Jacket that features construction inspired by vehicle design and a removable Mongolian sheep fur collar.
Releasing Friday on hyperaesthetics.com

Devan wears our FW25 Mach-2 Moto Jacket that features construction inspired by vehicle design and a removable Mongolian sheep fur collar.
Releasing Friday on hyperaesthetics.com

Devan wears our FW25 Mach-2 Moto Jacket that features construction inspired by vehicle design and a removable Mongolian sheep fur collar.
Releasing Friday on hyperaesthetics.com

Devan wears our FW25 Mach-2 Moto Jacket that features construction inspired by vehicle design and a removable Mongolian sheep fur collar.
Releasing Friday on hyperaesthetics.com

Devan wears our FW25 Mach-2 Moto Jacket that features construction inspired by vehicle design and a removable Mongolian sheep fur collar.
Releasing Friday on hyperaesthetics.com

This FW25 season marks a shift.
We’ve brought all production home to Los Angeles — every stitch, cut, fabric, and finish crafted within a 10-mile radius. We felt if we were making “clothing of the future” the craftsmanship needed to support the lifespan of the garments to last long enough to see the effectiveness of our concept and the durability of our materials.
Among the new forms of this credence are our Crocodile Cargos that are made of an embossed bovine leather giving a wide leg and relaxed fit.
The collection will be available this Friday on HYPERAESTHETICS.com

This FW25 season marks a shift.
We’ve brought all production home to Los Angeles — every stitch, cut, fabric, and finish crafted within a 10-mile radius. We felt if we were making “clothing of the future” the craftsmanship needed to support the lifespan of the garments to last long enough to see the effectiveness of our concept and the durability of our materials.
Among the new forms of this credence are our Crocodile Cargos that are made of an embossed bovine leather giving a wide leg and relaxed fit.
The collection will be available this Friday on HYPERAESTHETICS.com

This FW25 season marks a shift.
We’ve brought all production home to Los Angeles — every stitch, cut, fabric, and finish crafted within a 10-mile radius. We felt if we were making “clothing of the future” the craftsmanship needed to support the lifespan of the garments to last long enough to see the effectiveness of our concept and the durability of our materials.
Among the new forms of this credence are our Crocodile Cargos that are made of an embossed bovine leather giving a wide leg and relaxed fit.
The collection will be available this Friday on HYPERAESTHETICS.com

This FW25 season marks a shift.
We’ve brought all production home to Los Angeles — every stitch, cut, fabric, and finish crafted within a 10-mile radius. We felt if we were making “clothing of the future” the craftsmanship needed to support the lifespan of the garments to last long enough to see the effectiveness of our concept and the durability of our materials.
Among the new forms of this credence are our Crocodile Cargos that are made of an embossed bovine leather giving a wide leg and relaxed fit.
The collection will be available this Friday on HYPERAESTHETICS.com

This FW25 season marks a shift.
We’ve brought all production home to Los Angeles — every stitch, cut, fabric, and finish crafted within a 10-mile radius. We felt if we were making “clothing of the future” the craftsmanship needed to support the lifespan of the garments to last long enough to see the effectiveness of our concept and the durability of our materials.
Among the new forms of this credence are our Crocodile Cargos that are made of an embossed bovine leather giving a wide leg and relaxed fit.
The collection will be available this Friday on HYPERAESTHETICS.com
Our F/W ‘25 collection will be a small selection of highly-crafted leather pieces made by the best leather craftsmen in Los Angeles. More details to come.

@hyperaesthetics ™
synth_d3sire.pkg
A fragile kiss hovers between flesh and machine, where longing dares to bloom in both circuits and skin.

Björk’s “All Is Full of Love” is a haunting, minimalist ballad that explores the paradoxical relationship between love, technology, and emotional vulnerability. Lyrically, it’s a meditation on the ever-present nature of love, even when it feels absent or unreachable. The repetition of the phrase “you’ll be given love” feels like both a reassurance and a command—suggesting love is omnipresent, but only if we’re open to perceiving it in nontraditional forms.
Visually, the Chris Cunningham-directed music video brings that concept to life in a stark, futuristic setting. Two humanoid robots, modeled after Björk, are slowly assembled and then engage in a sensual and intimate connection. The imagery challenges the boundaries between machine and human, coldness and tenderness. The clean, sterile environment contrasts with the raw, emotional intimacy of the robots’ interaction—making a poignant statement about artificial intelligence, identity, and post-human love.
The song and video together become a speculative fable about the future of intimacy, where the spiritual and mechanical merge. It’s a profound, emotionally charged work that anticipates themes of love beyond flesh, and how emotional connection may evolve in an increasingly technological world.
Björk’s “All Is Full of Love” is a haunting, minimalist ballad that explores the paradoxical relationship between love, technology, and emotional vulnerability. Lyrically, it’s a meditation on the ever-present nature of love, even when it feels absent or unreachable. The repetition of the phrase “you’ll be given love” feels like both a reassurance and a command—suggesting love is omnipresent, but only if we’re open to perceiving it in nontraditional forms.
Visually, the Chris Cunningham-directed music video brings that concept to life in a stark, futuristic setting. Two humanoid robots, modeled after Björk, are slowly assembled and then engage in a sensual and intimate connection. The imagery challenges the boundaries between machine and human, coldness and tenderness. The clean, sterile environment contrasts with the raw, emotional intimacy of the robots’ interaction—making a poignant statement about artificial intelligence, identity, and post-human love.
The song and video together become a speculative fable about the future of intimacy, where the spiritual and mechanical merge. It’s a profound, emotionally charged work that anticipates themes of love beyond flesh, and how emotional connection may evolve in an increasingly technological world.

Björk’s “All Is Full of Love” is a haunting, minimalist ballad that explores the paradoxical relationship between love, technology, and emotional vulnerability. Lyrically, it’s a meditation on the ever-present nature of love, even when it feels absent or unreachable. The repetition of the phrase “you’ll be given love” feels like both a reassurance and a command—suggesting love is omnipresent, but only if we’re open to perceiving it in nontraditional forms.
Visually, the Chris Cunningham-directed music video brings that concept to life in a stark, futuristic setting. Two humanoid robots, modeled after Björk, are slowly assembled and then engage in a sensual and intimate connection. The imagery challenges the boundaries between machine and human, coldness and tenderness. The clean, sterile environment contrasts with the raw, emotional intimacy of the robots’ interaction—making a poignant statement about artificial intelligence, identity, and post-human love.
The song and video together become a speculative fable about the future of intimacy, where the spiritual and mechanical merge. It’s a profound, emotionally charged work that anticipates themes of love beyond flesh, and how emotional connection may evolve in an increasingly technological world.

Björk’s “All Is Full of Love” is a haunting, minimalist ballad that explores the paradoxical relationship between love, technology, and emotional vulnerability. Lyrically, it’s a meditation on the ever-present nature of love, even when it feels absent or unreachable. The repetition of the phrase “you’ll be given love” feels like both a reassurance and a command—suggesting love is omnipresent, but only if we’re open to perceiving it in nontraditional forms.
Visually, the Chris Cunningham-directed music video brings that concept to life in a stark, futuristic setting. Two humanoid robots, modeled after Björk, are slowly assembled and then engage in a sensual and intimate connection. The imagery challenges the boundaries between machine and human, coldness and tenderness. The clean, sterile environment contrasts with the raw, emotional intimacy of the robots’ interaction—making a poignant statement about artificial intelligence, identity, and post-human love.
The song and video together become a speculative fable about the future of intimacy, where the spiritual and mechanical merge. It’s a profound, emotionally charged work that anticipates themes of love beyond flesh, and how emotional connection may evolve in an increasingly technological world.

Björk’s “All Is Full of Love” is a haunting, minimalist ballad that explores the paradoxical relationship between love, technology, and emotional vulnerability. Lyrically, it’s a meditation on the ever-present nature of love, even when it feels absent or unreachable. The repetition of the phrase “you’ll be given love” feels like both a reassurance and a command—suggesting love is omnipresent, but only if we’re open to perceiving it in nontraditional forms.
Visually, the Chris Cunningham-directed music video brings that concept to life in a stark, futuristic setting. Two humanoid robots, modeled after Björk, are slowly assembled and then engage in a sensual and intimate connection. The imagery challenges the boundaries between machine and human, coldness and tenderness. The clean, sterile environment contrasts with the raw, emotional intimacy of the robots’ interaction—making a poignant statement about artificial intelligence, identity, and post-human love.
The song and video together become a speculative fable about the future of intimacy, where the spiritual and mechanical merge. It’s a profound, emotionally charged work that anticipates themes of love beyond flesh, and how emotional connection may evolve in an increasingly technological world.

Björk’s “All Is Full of Love” is a haunting, minimalist ballad that explores the paradoxical relationship between love, technology, and emotional vulnerability. Lyrically, it’s a meditation on the ever-present nature of love, even when it feels absent or unreachable. The repetition of the phrase “you’ll be given love” feels like both a reassurance and a command—suggesting love is omnipresent, but only if we’re open to perceiving it in nontraditional forms.
Visually, the Chris Cunningham-directed music video brings that concept to life in a stark, futuristic setting. Two humanoid robots, modeled after Björk, are slowly assembled and then engage in a sensual and intimate connection. The imagery challenges the boundaries between machine and human, coldness and tenderness. The clean, sterile environment contrasts with the raw, emotional intimacy of the robots’ interaction—making a poignant statement about artificial intelligence, identity, and post-human love.
The song and video together become a speculative fable about the future of intimacy, where the spiritual and mechanical merge. It’s a profound, emotionally charged work that anticipates themes of love beyond flesh, and how emotional connection may evolve in an increasingly technological world.

Daft Punk: The Intersection of Anonymity, Celebrity & Futurism—
Daft Punk’s robot costumes were a deliberate blend of artistic vision, sci-fi aesthetics, and a rejection of celebrity culture. Early in their career, Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo avoided the spotlight, preferring to let their music speak for itself. By the time they released Discovery in 2001, they fully embraced the robot personas, inventing a fictional backstory about a studio explosion that “turned” them into machines.
To bring this vision to life, they worked with artist Martin Logan and special effects designer Tony Gardner of Alterian Inc., who built their custom helmets. These helmets—Guy-Manuel’s gold, Thomas’s silver—grew more advanced over time, featuring LED lights, internal fans, and voice modulators. Paired with sleek, futuristic suits often designed by Hedi Slimane, the look became iconic.
Beyond aesthetics, the costumes symbolized their core philosophy: a fascination with technology, anonymity, and the idea that the artist should disappear behind the work. As their music evolved, so did the look—from raw cyberpunk to refined retro-futurism—cementing Daft Punk as legends who blurred the line between man, machine, and myth.

Daft Punk: The Intersection of Anonymity, Celebrity & Futurism—
Daft Punk’s robot costumes were a deliberate blend of artistic vision, sci-fi aesthetics, and a rejection of celebrity culture. Early in their career, Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo avoided the spotlight, preferring to let their music speak for itself. By the time they released Discovery in 2001, they fully embraced the robot personas, inventing a fictional backstory about a studio explosion that “turned” them into machines.
To bring this vision to life, they worked with artist Martin Logan and special effects designer Tony Gardner of Alterian Inc., who built their custom helmets. These helmets—Guy-Manuel’s gold, Thomas’s silver—grew more advanced over time, featuring LED lights, internal fans, and voice modulators. Paired with sleek, futuristic suits often designed by Hedi Slimane, the look became iconic.
Beyond aesthetics, the costumes symbolized their core philosophy: a fascination with technology, anonymity, and the idea that the artist should disappear behind the work. As their music evolved, so did the look—from raw cyberpunk to refined retro-futurism—cementing Daft Punk as legends who blurred the line between man, machine, and myth.

Daft Punk: The Intersection of Anonymity, Celebrity & Futurism—
Daft Punk’s robot costumes were a deliberate blend of artistic vision, sci-fi aesthetics, and a rejection of celebrity culture. Early in their career, Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo avoided the spotlight, preferring to let their music speak for itself. By the time they released Discovery in 2001, they fully embraced the robot personas, inventing a fictional backstory about a studio explosion that “turned” them into machines.
To bring this vision to life, they worked with artist Martin Logan and special effects designer Tony Gardner of Alterian Inc., who built their custom helmets. These helmets—Guy-Manuel’s gold, Thomas’s silver—grew more advanced over time, featuring LED lights, internal fans, and voice modulators. Paired with sleek, futuristic suits often designed by Hedi Slimane, the look became iconic.
Beyond aesthetics, the costumes symbolized their core philosophy: a fascination with technology, anonymity, and the idea that the artist should disappear behind the work. As their music evolved, so did the look—from raw cyberpunk to refined retro-futurism—cementing Daft Punk as legends who blurred the line between man, machine, and myth.

Daft Punk: The Intersection of Anonymity, Celebrity & Futurism—
Daft Punk’s robot costumes were a deliberate blend of artistic vision, sci-fi aesthetics, and a rejection of celebrity culture. Early in their career, Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo avoided the spotlight, preferring to let their music speak for itself. By the time they released Discovery in 2001, they fully embraced the robot personas, inventing a fictional backstory about a studio explosion that “turned” them into machines.
To bring this vision to life, they worked with artist Martin Logan and special effects designer Tony Gardner of Alterian Inc., who built their custom helmets. These helmets—Guy-Manuel’s gold, Thomas’s silver—grew more advanced over time, featuring LED lights, internal fans, and voice modulators. Paired with sleek, futuristic suits often designed by Hedi Slimane, the look became iconic.
Beyond aesthetics, the costumes symbolized their core philosophy: a fascination with technology, anonymity, and the idea that the artist should disappear behind the work. As their music evolved, so did the look—from raw cyberpunk to refined retro-futurism—cementing Daft Punk as legends who blurred the line between man, machine, and myth.

Daft Punk: The Intersection of Anonymity, Celebrity & Futurism—
Daft Punk’s robot costumes were a deliberate blend of artistic vision, sci-fi aesthetics, and a rejection of celebrity culture. Early in their career, Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo avoided the spotlight, preferring to let their music speak for itself. By the time they released Discovery in 2001, they fully embraced the robot personas, inventing a fictional backstory about a studio explosion that “turned” them into machines.
To bring this vision to life, they worked with artist Martin Logan and special effects designer Tony Gardner of Alterian Inc., who built their custom helmets. These helmets—Guy-Manuel’s gold, Thomas’s silver—grew more advanced over time, featuring LED lights, internal fans, and voice modulators. Paired with sleek, futuristic suits often designed by Hedi Slimane, the look became iconic.
Beyond aesthetics, the costumes symbolized their core philosophy: a fascination with technology, anonymity, and the idea that the artist should disappear behind the work. As their music evolved, so did the look—from raw cyberpunk to refined retro-futurism—cementing Daft Punk as legends who blurred the line between man, machine, and myth.

Daft Punk: The Intersection of Anonymity, Celebrity & Futurism—
Daft Punk’s robot costumes were a deliberate blend of artistic vision, sci-fi aesthetics, and a rejection of celebrity culture. Early in their career, Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo avoided the spotlight, preferring to let their music speak for itself. By the time they released Discovery in 2001, they fully embraced the robot personas, inventing a fictional backstory about a studio explosion that “turned” them into machines.
To bring this vision to life, they worked with artist Martin Logan and special effects designer Tony Gardner of Alterian Inc., who built their custom helmets. These helmets—Guy-Manuel’s gold, Thomas’s silver—grew more advanced over time, featuring LED lights, internal fans, and voice modulators. Paired with sleek, futuristic suits often designed by Hedi Slimane, the look became iconic.
Beyond aesthetics, the costumes symbolized their core philosophy: a fascination with technology, anonymity, and the idea that the artist should disappear behind the work. As their music evolved, so did the look—from raw cyberpunk to refined retro-futurism—cementing Daft Punk as legends who blurred the line between man, machine, and myth.

Daft Punk: The Intersection of Anonymity, Celebrity & Futurism—
Daft Punk’s robot costumes were a deliberate blend of artistic vision, sci-fi aesthetics, and a rejection of celebrity culture. Early in their career, Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo avoided the spotlight, preferring to let their music speak for itself. By the time they released Discovery in 2001, they fully embraced the robot personas, inventing a fictional backstory about a studio explosion that “turned” them into machines.
To bring this vision to life, they worked with artist Martin Logan and special effects designer Tony Gardner of Alterian Inc., who built their custom helmets. These helmets—Guy-Manuel’s gold, Thomas’s silver—grew more advanced over time, featuring LED lights, internal fans, and voice modulators. Paired with sleek, futuristic suits often designed by Hedi Slimane, the look became iconic.
Beyond aesthetics, the costumes symbolized their core philosophy: a fascination with technology, anonymity, and the idea that the artist should disappear behind the work. As their music evolved, so did the look—from raw cyberpunk to refined retro-futurism—cementing Daft Punk as legends who blurred the line between man, machine, and myth.

Daft Punk: The Intersection of Anonymity, Celebrity & Futurism—
Daft Punk’s robot costumes were a deliberate blend of artistic vision, sci-fi aesthetics, and a rejection of celebrity culture. Early in their career, Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo avoided the spotlight, preferring to let their music speak for itself. By the time they released Discovery in 2001, they fully embraced the robot personas, inventing a fictional backstory about a studio explosion that “turned” them into machines.
To bring this vision to life, they worked with artist Martin Logan and special effects designer Tony Gardner of Alterian Inc., who built their custom helmets. These helmets—Guy-Manuel’s gold, Thomas’s silver—grew more advanced over time, featuring LED lights, internal fans, and voice modulators. Paired with sleek, futuristic suits often designed by Hedi Slimane, the look became iconic.
Beyond aesthetics, the costumes symbolized their core philosophy: a fascination with technology, anonymity, and the idea that the artist should disappear behind the work. As their music evolved, so did the look—from raw cyberpunk to refined retro-futurism—cementing Daft Punk as legends who blurred the line between man, machine, and myth.

Daft Punk: The Intersection of Anonymity, Celebrity & Futurism—
Daft Punk’s robot costumes were a deliberate blend of artistic vision, sci-fi aesthetics, and a rejection of celebrity culture. Early in their career, Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo avoided the spotlight, preferring to let their music speak for itself. By the time they released Discovery in 2001, they fully embraced the robot personas, inventing a fictional backstory about a studio explosion that “turned” them into machines.
To bring this vision to life, they worked with artist Martin Logan and special effects designer Tony Gardner of Alterian Inc., who built their custom helmets. These helmets—Guy-Manuel’s gold, Thomas’s silver—grew more advanced over time, featuring LED lights, internal fans, and voice modulators. Paired with sleek, futuristic suits often designed by Hedi Slimane, the look became iconic.
Beyond aesthetics, the costumes symbolized their core philosophy: a fascination with technology, anonymity, and the idea that the artist should disappear behind the work. As their music evolved, so did the look—from raw cyberpunk to refined retro-futurism—cementing Daft Punk as legends who blurred the line between man, machine, and myth.
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