
GEN BETA MOM TO BE
A SPECULATIVE JOURNEY INTO THE FUTURE.
Graduation Collection by Miriam Haddad
Greatest Gen
Built from survival and sacrifice:
the silhouette merges wartime utility with domestic restraint. Red lace breaks through the protective shell, exposing inherited vulnerability beneath heroic resilience.
Silent Gen
Post-war protection and inherited discipline : a padded utility silhouette meets a pencil skirt and tailored proportions. Signal red clashes with muted beige to expose repression under “correct” conformity.
Baby Boomer
Tailoring collides with freedom : suit trousers plus a zip-on flannel bohemian skirt referencing Woodstock. One-sided puff sleeves and a single-sleeved jacket break symmetry; the lace bodysuit stays as the vulnerable “second skin.”
Gen X
Fitness culture + power dressing + grunge in one body : cropped sweater tucked into an aerobic bodysuit with legwarmers. A denim “scarf” mimics shoulder pads, while distressed denim over lace shows rebellion with exposed vulnerability.
Gen Y
Layered softness and contradiction : tulle, draped satin, and a mini pleated skirt sit over casual denim. Romantic details crash into basics — idealism and nostalgia under pressure.
Gen Z
Softness + irony : bridal tulle and hyper-femininity clash with denim and a graphic tee for meme culture, protest wear, and online identity. Hooded, corseted structure signals constant self-curation; the lace bodysuit remains the shared base.
Gen Alpha
Algorithm-shaped utility : a denim-based, modular silhouette stacks workwear volume into a soft-armor system. Identity is buffered, layered, and protected — born into a world where smartphones and AI are the default.
Gen BETA
The first body designed to merge with machines : leather lines trace and exaggerate muscle groups, treating the body as an interface. A prototype of human upgrade— optimized, modified, still evolving —carrying all inherited histories forward.
Sandbox Showroom
(9-/44)
Gen Beta
Mom To BE
Visit our Experience in the Sandbox Showroom.
