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Coperni Expands to Beauty With Probiotic Athleisure

The French label launched the C+ collection, an athleisure line blending beauty and fashion with ingredient-infused fabric.
Paloma Elsesser models leggings for Coperni's new C+ athleisure line.
Paloma Elsesser stars in the campaign for Coperni's new C+ athleisure line. (Bettina Pittaluga)

From a spray-on dress to a robot dog, Coperni runway shows are never short on new technology. For its Oct. 6 Paris Fashion Week show, the French label’s latest high-tech reveal marks its debut in the beauty category with the launch of its new fashion-as-skincare athleisure line.

“We live in the beauty era,” said Arnaud Vaillant, CEO and co-founder of Coperni. “Everyone these days is very into functionality, this idea of taking care of yourself.”

Teased on social media before its official announcement today with a campaign starring model Paloma Elsesser, the brand’s new C+ collection is made up of athleisure basics infused with probiotics and prebiotics meant to transfer from fabric to skin. Described as “carewear,” the first three items – leggings, a top and a bodysuit – will be made available for pre-orders on Coperni’s DTC site on Thursday at 5 PM Paris time, ahead of the brand’s runway show on Oct. 6.

While viral fashion show moments such as spraying a dress on Bella Hadid have helped generate publicity for the brand in recent years, the co-founders said its latest innovation prioritises sales rather than brand awareness alone.

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“We were a bit frustrated because they were not commercial projects. It was more fashion,” said Sébastien Meyer, creative director and co-founder, of the brand’s notable runway events. “That’s why we wanted to create a project with a commercial aspect.”

Priced between €150 and €180 ($175-$211), the C+ items are comparatively accessible to Coperni’s main collection. But Meyer said that they will be integrated into the upcoming runway show styled with the dresses and tailoring the brand is known for.

Paloma Elsesser models a gray bodysuit for Coperni's new C+ collection.
Paloma Elsesser models a bodysuit for Coperni's new C+ collection. (Bettina Pittaluga)

This won’t be the first time the brand has launched functional fabric, as it previously unveiled antibacterial garments during the pandemic in 2020. Skincare-infused clothing items have been making their way to the market as of late through fashion startups such as PH5 with its hyaluronic acid sleepwear or Skims’ recently unveiled face wrap with “collagen yarn.”

With up to 140,000 colony-forming units of live bacteria in one gram of fabric, Coperni’s line is the first to use a new fabric patented by Switzerland-based material innovation company HeiQ, which has worked with brands such as Patagonia, Rossingol and Boss. It is meant to last for at least 40 washes, and improve the skin’s microbiome and moisture.

Vaillant sees the new line as a bridge between fashion and beauty, comparing it to a mashup of Skims and Augustinus Bader.

In the future, the co-founders hope the new line will attract beauty retailers, and plan to expand the C+ collection to more products. A future show will be centred around wellness.

“It’s a world that we can invent. There is a space for a crossroad between beauty, clothes and fashion,” said Meyer.

Want to dive deeper into an insight from this article? Check out The Brain of Fashion, BoF’s new generative AI tool where you can unlock BoF’s beauty archive with a single question.

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Further Reading

At Long Last, NikeSkims Makes Its Debut

By pairing top athletes with Kim Kardashian, the campaign signals NikeSkims is courting a broader audience that blurs the lines between performance and lifestyle.

Is ‘Clean’ Fashion About to Have a Moment?

With clean beauty now mainstream, an emerging wave of brands are promoting skin-kind clothing made from natural fibres and without the use of harsh chemicals, seeking to tap into consumer interest in products that promise health and wellness benefits.

About the authors
Liz Flora
Liz Flora

Liz Flora is a Beauty Correspondent at Business of Fashion. She is based in Los Angeles and covers beauty and wellness.

Brennan Kilbane
Brennan Kilbane

Brennan Kilbane is News and Features Editor at The Business of Beauty. He is based in London, and supports BoF’s coverage of the multifaceted cosmetics industry, from fine fragrance to wellness trends.

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