
How Mix & Match's SS25 Collection Is Reclaiming Local Textiles
Once a staple of Egypt's high street, the homegrown label returns with a sharpened vision: no synthetics, no imports, and no compromises.
In 1985, before fashion brands were talking about 'local,' Mix & Match opened its first shop in Cairo. The formula was straightforward: bold cotton prints, forgiving silhouettes, and fabrics made for Egypt's heat. Co-founded by Shahira Fahmy, her mother, and a close friend, the label quickly became a fixture on the high street - practical, accessible, and unmistakably Egyptian.
Then the 2000s hit. Local textile production faltered, synthetic imports flooded the market, and the brand shrank from 22 stores to six. Fahmy turned to architecture. The clothes lost their edge. What started as a textile-first project became entangled in globalised supply chains. That's when her mother gave her the green light to take the reins - with no conditions, only a question: what would it take to make Mix & Match matter again?
Ten years later, the answer is clear. The SS25 collection opens with a reassertion of control. Fabrics are now woven, cut, and sewn in 6th October City by a team Fahmy describes as 'intergenerational' — some of whom have been on the factory floor since the '80s. The brand has eliminated synthetics. Every offcut is reused. A printing error becomes a belt. A misaligned motif becomes a shoulder panel. Waste is absorbed back into the process.
This season, the reference point is the Qajar dynasty - 19th-century Persia at its most excessive. Fahmy became fascinated with its visual codes: layered florals, ornamental stripes, metallic turbans. 'It wasn't decoration for the sake of it,' she says. 'It was political, performative, and precise.'
Working with co-designer Rola Hussein, Fahmy channelled that sensibility into a lean collection with deliberate impact. Linen dresses with architectural volume. Cropped jackets cut in dense cotton. A standout blouse printed with the ceiling pattern of a Qajar palace - symmetrical at first glance, chaotic in the details. Colour is central: pistachio, saffron, pomegranate, sage - shades pulled from antique textiles and reworked onto breathable, locally sourced cloth from the Nile Delta.
The collection is designed to flex. Pieces layer across months and body types. A cotton shift dress folds into autumn with a long coat. Linen trousers reappear under winter kaftans. Sizing is uncoupled from conventional charts. 'Top and bottom don't need to match,' Fahmy says. 'They need to work.'
SS25 made its debut on May 5 at Takiya Al-Mawlawiyah, a 19th-century Ottoman landmark in Cairo with ties to the Qajar presence in Egypt. Instead of a soundtrack, the show unfolded to live instrumentation - Egyptian darbuka colliding with Persian strings. The setup, she says, is part of the point: 'When you choreograph the setting as carefully as the collection, the story holds.'
The show has another function. Every ticket sold funds ambulances and medical aid via the Egyptian Red Crescent for Gaza. Fahmy insists that the gesture isn't symbolic. 'The clothes are about care - care for the body, care for process. The show should carry that through.'
Mix & Match's revival has started to stick. Mothers who wore the brand in the '90s are bringing their daughters to fittings. Fahmy's own son, once sceptical, now turns up in full linen. The brand's language has changed - leaner, quieter, but no less specific. The Qajar references act as a reminder: that visual identity can carry weight, that a fabric archive can double as a political one, and that local production doesn't need to look inward to stay grounded.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CairoScene
5 hours ago
- CairoScene
Daddy Squad & Misty Team Up With Tymour for ‘I Won't Stop'
'I Won't Stop' is a bright house track from Daddy Squad, Misty and Tymour, landing just in time for summer via Love Attack Records, with a remix by Johannes Albert to follow. Jul 20, 2025 As summer reaches its peak, Daddy Squad teams up with Egyptian artists Misty and Tymour for a new house single on Love Attack Records, offering a vibrant, club-focused release built for high rotation. Titled 'I Won't Stop', the track blends Daddy Squad's signature retro-futurist sound with Tymour's soulful topline - originally co-written with Hatem El Chiati for the song 'Restless' - and Misty's sharp, dancefloor-ready production. The result is a polished, melodic house cut with plenty of groove. Now available across platforms, the single has already earned early support from names like Adam Port, DJ Harvey, Massimiliano Pagliara, Vhyce, and Hard Ton. A remix by Berlin-based Love Attack affiliate Johannes Albert is set to follow on August 15th, promising a bigger festival-ready rework to close out the season.


Identity
15 hours ago
- Identity
Remembering Omar El Sharif: 5 Movies That Celebrate His Timeless Legacy
Today marks the anniversary of the passing of Omar Sharif, a legend who left a huge mark on both Egyptian and international cinema. From his early days on the silver screen to becoming a Hollywood icon, Sharif's presence was always defined by depth, elegance, and a rare ability to bring characters to life in a way that felt grand and deeply human all together. His filmography managed to bridge cultures and generations, with standout roles that continue to resonate to this day. Whether it was romantic classics, political dramas, or global blockbusters, Sharif brought something unforgettable to every part he played. In his memory, we're revisiting some of the films that remind us why his work continues to live on, quietly powerful, and always feel to be timeless.


Al-Ahram Weekly
a day ago
- Al-Ahram Weekly
Alexandria Mediterranean Countries Film Festival to honour Laila Eloui - Screens - Arts & Culture
The management of Alexandria Mediterranean Countries Film Festival revealed that the event's 41st edition (2-6 October) will honour Egyptian actress Laila Eloui. This honour comes in recognition of Eloui's long and distinguished artistic career—one of the most prominent in the history of Egyptian and Arab cinema. Born in 1962, Laila Eloui has left a significant mark through a wide range of roles—classic, social, romantic, and comedic—delivering performances that have become iconic in Egyptian cinematic memory. She has starred in nearly 100 films, sharing the screen with many of Egypt's most renowned actors, including Adel Imam, Ahmed Zaki, and Farid Shawky, and working under the direction of dozens of filmmakers, such as Youssef Chahine. Chahine cast her in Al-Masseer (Destiny, 1997), alongside Nour El-Sherif, Mahmoud Hemeida, and Khaled El Nabawy. The film competed for the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival. Eloui also starred in his Iskendereya Kaman We Kaman (Alexandria Again and Forever, 1989), again appearing with El-Sherif and Hemeida. She has also worked with directors Mohamed Khan, Samir Seif, Atef El-Tayeb, Yousry Nasrallah, Ahmed Yehia, Raafat El-Mehy, Kawthar Younis, Ayten Amin, and many others across generations. A highly versatile actress, Eloui has also appeared in more than 60 television series and 20 theatre productions. She has served on the juries of several local and international film festivals and has received numerous honours from the cinema industry. Alexandria Mediterranean Countries Film Festival One of Egypt's oldest film festivals, the Alexandria Mediterranean Countries Film Festival is an annual event organized by the Egyptian Association for Film Writers and Critics, under the auspices of the Ministries of Culture, Information, and Tourism. It highlights the cultural wealth of the Mediterranean Basin. The 41st edition will take place from 2 to 6 October under the theme Cinema and Beauty, with broad participation from filmmakers across Egypt and the Mediterranean. Prominent Egyptian film critic, writer, poet, and journalist Amir Abaza heads this year's edition. Follow us on: Facebook Instagram Whatsapp Short link: