“Fashion became my voice when words failed.”
In this single sentence, Hidar Safaa defines not only her personal journey, but an entire philosophy — one rooted in healing, anger, softness, and revolt.
Her work is not simply clothing. It is an unfiltered response to silence, to powerlessness, to the invisible structures that shape and sometimes strangle us — especially women. Her latest body of work, the BREAK IT collection, tears those structures apart, stitch by stitch.

“I’m deeply inspired by women’s resilience,” Hidar Safaa
There’s no false heroism in this story — just truth, raw and refined.


shares. “Especially those who reclaim their voices after being silenced. The contrast between vulnerability and defiance — that’s what drives my creative world.”
This tension is felt in every piece. Structural tailoring collides with flowing lines. Rigid cords and silver grommets interrupt soft, skin-like textures. Chains are not just embellishments — they are metaphors for restraint, and the audacity it takes to break it. There’s elegance in the chaos. A kind of romantic darkness that calls to mind the work of Alexander McQueen — one of her icons — and the sculptural, theory-defying genius of Rei Kawakubo. Yet her deepest inspirations are not found in fame or archives, but in the unnamed women who dared to say no. Who dared to scream. Who dared to rise.
The silhouettes in BREAK IT feel like emotional armor. These garments are for those who don’t follow rules — they confront them.

Hidar safaa designs for the people who walk into rooms and carry silence like a weapon.
For those who are healing, who are angry, who are learning to love again — on their own terms. For the mysterious, the bold, and the emotionally unapologetic.
Asked to describe her design philosophy, she doesn’t hesitate:
“Feminine rebellion. Poetic darkness. Tailored emotion.”
Every word is earned, every stitch intentional. Hidar safaa sees fashion as more than a statement — it’s a weapon, a shield, and a love letter. Her garments carry the stories that can’t always be told out loud. They are for those who survived, who are still surviving, and who refuse to disappear quietly.
In the end, BREAK IT isn’t just a title — it’s a call. A reminder that breaking is not failure. It’s the beginning of freedom.
