The Spanish streetwear brand redefines luxury with a one-day immersive pop-up celebrating rest, intimacy, and the art of slowing down.
PARIS, January 2026 – Spanish streetwear brand Nude Project made its Paris Fashion Week debut on Saturday, January 24th with “The Bed Temple,” a one-day immersive experience that transformed a Parisian venue into a sanctuary of stillness. While the rest of the city rushed between shows and after-parties, Nude Project invited visitors to do something radical: stop, breathe, and rest.
The pop-up, conceived as a refuge from the chaos of Fashion Week, placed the bed at the center of the experience. Three beds occupied the space, each representing a distinct state of being: introspection, interaction, and nothingness. Visitors were not spectators but participants, invited to engage with the installations and embrace a slower, more intentional way of being.


The Concept: Your Most Private Place, Now Public
“Today, luxury is no longer defined by excess or accumulation, but by the ability to pause and be present,” the brand stated in its announcement. “This is not a traditional event or store, but a temporary space that invites slowness and presence. A domestic temple where urgency disappears, the private becomes visible, and rest is allowed.”
The three beds each carried symbolic weight. The first represented introspection: a body awake without producing, reading, listening, observing itself. The second embodied interaction: bodies meeting, separating, holding space for care, tension, and intimacy. The third stood for nothingness: a conscious pause where no action was required, only time passing.
The installation invited performances that prioritized presence over productivity, positioning the spectator not as an observer but as part of a slowed, shared experience.



About Nude Project
Founded in 2018 by Bruno Casanovas and Alex Benlloch in Barcelona, Nude Project has grown from a college dorm room venture into one of the fastest-growing streetwear brands in Spain. Starting with just 600 euros, the founders built a label that now operates physical stores in Madrid, Valencia, Barcelona, Lisbon, and Milan, alongside a thriving e-commerce presence.
The brand has attracted a devoted following among Gen Z consumers and celebrity fans including Bad Gyal, Quevedo, Karol G, Maluma, and Rauw Alejandro. Known for its relaxed silhouettes, muted color palettes, and wide-leg denim, Nude Project offers clothing designed to feel good rather than demand attention.
More than a clothing label, Nude Project has positioned itself as what Casanovas calls “an attitude brand.” The company describes its ethos as speaking to misfits and outsiders, creating spaces where people feel free to be themselves. This philosophy extends to their retail approach, which favors experiential pop-ups over traditional storefronts.
A Track Record of Immersive Retail
The Paris activation follows a successful U.S. debut in October 2025, when Nude Project opened a two-week pop-up in Miami’s Design District. That event drew over 2,000 people on opening day, with lines wrapping around the block. The Miami space featured the brand’s signature Mediterranean-influenced aesthetic, including ivory concrete interiors and a central tree installation.
Casanovas has described the brand’s ambition to create “not stores but temples, places where the community really wants to be.” The Bed Temple in Paris represents the fullest expression of this vision to date, moving beyond product display to offer an emotional and sensory experience rooted in the brand’s core values.
Comfort as the New Luxury
The Bed Temple arrives at a moment when fashion is reckoning with shifting consumer values. The quiet luxury movement has seen brands like The Row and Loro Piana thrive by prioritizing discretion over display. Younger consumers increasingly value experiences over possessions, wellness over accumulation, and authenticity over aspiration.
Nude Project’s intervention argues that in a culture treating busyness as virtue, choosing stillness becomes radical. The bed, that most intimate of domestic objects, becomes a symbol of permission: to rest, to be vulnerable, to exist without producing.
“We want people to come in, take a breath, and understand that Nude is more than clothing,” Casanovas has said. “It’s attitude, community, and purpose.”