KRiLL BERLIN: Rooted in Design Conscience

KRiLL BERLiN is not just a clothing label, it is a claim on what fashion can be when it is thoughtful, sustainable and rooted in design conscience. Emerging from Berlin, the brand was founded by designer Meike Hampe, who early on demonstrated a design sensitivity that earned her recognition and nominations for major design awards. KRiLL BERLiN exists at the intersection of design, responsibility and quiet rebellion. Emerging from Berlin’s creative underground, the brand approaches fashion as a form of spatial thinking, where fabric, body and movement exist in consistent dialogue. Her garments are not designed to chase seasons but to occupy time, shaped by intention rather than urgency. The language of KRiLL BERLiN is tactile and architectural. Soft tulle, raw cottons and layered textures are cut into silhouettes that feel both experimental and wearable, inviting the body to move rather than conform. There is a deliberate tension in the work, fragility meets strength, structure meets softness, restraint meets expression. Each piece feels considered, built to be lived in rather than consumed and discarded. Sustainability is not treated as an aesthetic choice but as a foundational principle. Production happens in small runs, materials are responsibly sourced within Europe, and craftsmanship remains visible in every seam. This commitment gives the brand a quiet integrity, one that resists the anonymity of mass fashion without demanding attention. What makes Meike Hampe‘s brand resonate is its refusal to explain itself too loudly. The clothes speak through texture, shape and presence, allowing wearers to define their own narrative. In a city known for experimentation and independence, KRiLL feels at home, offering garments that sit comfortably between art and everyday life, representing a slower, more conscious vision of fashion, one where expression is intentional, individuality is respected, and design remains human.