As autumn’s golden light begins to settle over Paris, the fashion world is turning its gaze to something deeper than the next trendline it’s turning toward innovation. From September 16‑18, 2025, Première Vision Paris returns to Paris Nord Villepinte with a renewed purpose. It’s not merely about fabric or form any more; it’s about what fashion can become
sustainable, technological, ethical, beautiful.
Innovation & Technology: More Than a Theme
This edition emphasizes Innovation & Technology as the central thread running through the show. Whether it’s textiles, dyes, supply chain traceability, or bio‑materials, the message is clear: fashion must evolve, and PV Paris wants to be its laboratory. A spotlight feature is the Smart Creation space a showcase where materials, tech, and ecological transition meet performance demands and design ethics. It’s an intentional space where exhibitors present fabrics, fibers, and processes
pushing past the status quo.
Who’s There, What’s New
With over 1,000 exhibitors participating, including around 12% newcomers, the event brings together a broad cast of players. From small artisanal workshops to large innovating textile producers all under one roof.
Notable participants:
1) Creative Tech Textile / Hans Global: showing Seawool®, a fiber made from recycled oyster shells and ocean plastics, along with Smawarm®, a thermal insulation material derived from that fiber.
2) Hyosung TNC: presenting sustainable fiber solutions such as regen™ BIO Elastane, derived from sugarcane, and textile‑to‑textile recycling efforts aimed at circularity.
Also new this year: a beauty segment has been introduced, reflecting how fashion and beauty are increasingly intertwined materially, aesthetically, and culturally. It will be featured via a new “prospective space” and integrated in the show’s trend zones.
Ideas, Exchange & Knowledge
Première Vision isn’t just a trade show. For many attending, the value lies in its ideas, conversations, and glimpses of what fashion will need to offer tomorrow, not just today.There are themed visitor trails to help attendees navigate by priority whether sustainability, performance, or novelty. Multiple conference stages, pitch zones, and exhibitor‑buyer meetings set the scene. The Prospective space particularly aims
to help brands and creatives see AW 26‑27 materials and colors long before they cut the first pattern.
Why This Moment Matters
We often say fashion must do better this season, more than many, seems built around that mandate.Global economic pressures, climate urgency, and consumer demand for transparency are pushing innovation to the center.
Materials that were once exotic are now becoming standard. Bio‑materials, responsible dyeing, and traceability are no longer
optional luxuries they are expectations.
Also, it matters that small and mid‑sized exhibitors are here. Innovation isn’t just about large budgets; it’s also about creative ideas and resourceful adaptation. A fiber spun from discarded shells or elastane derived from renewable feedstock can ripple outward and inspire an industry.
What to Watch For
How materials like Seawool® perform in texture, durability, and scalability.
The uptake of regen™ and other bio‑based or circular fibers by brands accustomed to conventional synthetics.
The new beauty segment: how fashion‑beauty integration shows up in fabrics, finishes, and design aesthetics.
Traceability and sustainability metrics (eco‑scores, certifications, etc.) and how brands integrate them into buying
decisions.
The role of digital tools 3D modeling, simulation, virtual prototyping in reducing waste and streamlining design.
Challenges and Questions
Of course, ideals meet real world friction.Cost is often a barrier. Green fibers or bio‑materials cost more and may require different infrastructure. For many brands, balancing price, performance, and sustainability remains tricky.
Regulatory compliance is another challenge, especially with evolving EU rules on textile labeling and supply chain responsibility. Exhibitors need to show not just innovation but compliance.Consumer behavior is also unpredictable. Even when sustainable collections are offered, higher prices or slower supply can put off buyers. Innovation must align with market readiness.
Final Word
As PV Paris opens this September, it isn’t merely a sourcing show it’s a conversation about what fashion was, what it is, and what it must become. It’s for the thinker and the maker, the dreamer sketching late at night, and the engineer coding for color matching; the small‑label designer and the large‑scale producer.
In the shimmering panels of bio‑fabrics, in the careful chemistry of sustainable dyes, in the rhythmic hum of digital simulations there lies hope. For fashion that doesn’t just clothe, but cares. Première Vision Paris 2025 seems poised not just to display innovation, but to demand it. The future of fashion may well be imagined here and maybe even stitched into
reality.

