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A soft-shouldered jacket on the stand, seams shown Undyed worsted wool laid out for cutting A pressed-open seam, left on show The Maison Voss mark on undyed card
Maison · Antwerp · Est. 2012

Maison Voss

Undyed tailoring cut for the shoulder, shown out of Antwerp and built to outlast the season it was made for.

The method

The seam left visible, treated as ornament enough. Tailoring with nothing hidden inside it.

Tailoring cut for the shoulder. Since 2012.

The house

Maison Voss reads tailoring the way a knitwear house reads a cuff: as a place to show the make rather than hide it. Seams are pressed open and left on view, shoulders cut soft, and the whole garment argues that construction is the ornament and needs no other.

A soft-shouldered undyed jacket on the stand

Founded in Antwerp in 2012, the house works in undyed worsted wool and raw linen, cut for the shoulder and built to outlast the season. Where a trend house sells the next silhouette, Voss sells the same jacket, made better each year, until buyers return for the make rather than the news.

Undyed worsted wool cut on the table

Restraint here is structural. Nothing is fused, nothing is lined for the sake of it, and every seam that could be hidden is instead shown. A jacket is judged by how it sits after a decade, not a season, and priced for the hours that make that possible.

A jacket that has aged well on the stand

The house keeps its calendar short and its archive honest. A garment returns only when the make has improved, and the care card is as plain as the tailoring: brush, air, press rarely. It is tailoring built to be kept, in the quieter register of luxury that has nothing to do with a logo.

A tailor pressing a seam open by hand

The signatures

3 pieces

The cuts the house returns to, each built to outlast its season. Seams shown, shoulders soft, nothing hidden inside.

An undyed jacket with seams left visible The shown-seam jacket · Autumn/Winter 2026
Autumn/Winter 2026 · Worsted wool
The shown-seam jacket

Seams pressed open and left on view, the shoulder cut soft. The house’s clearest argument, and its most asked-for piece.

An undyed jacket with seams left visible
Autumn/Winter 2026 · Raw linen
The unlined coat

A coat built without a lining, so the make stays legible from the inside out. Undyed, unfused, cut to be kept.

An unlined undyed coat on the stand
Spring/Summer 2026 · Undyed worsted
The ten-year trouser

Cut for the way it sits after a decade rather than a season, and priced for the hours that make that possible.

Undyed worsted trousers, cut for longevity

The house, by the numbers

Since 2012

A tailoring house is best measured in what it will still stand behind years on. Not revenue, only the constants that have held since 2012.

0
The year the house opened, in a studio in Antwerp.
0
Years a jacket is cut to sit well, not one season.
0%
Fusing or bonding used anywhere in the construction, ever.
Ivanna Rudenko cutting a pattern by hand at Maison Voss
The designer

Ivanna Rudenko

Creative director and founder. Rudenko trained on the tailoring bench before opening the house, and still cuts the first of every pattern by hand. Fourteen years have gone into making the same jacket better rather than making a new one, until longevity became the house’s whole argument.

Collections, season by season

Every season

Every collection the house has shown, newest first. Read in order, the seasons make one case: the same jacket, cut better each year, until the repetition reads as standards rather than a lack of ideas.

Maison Voss AW26 opening look, an undyed jacket with seams shown The latest show · Autumn/Winter 2026 · Reviewed The same jacket, made better Fourteen looks, one standard

Other houses

Houses A–Z

Neighbours on the same platform, each working a similar restraint from a different angle. If Maison Voss reads as a house worth following, these are the next rooms to step into.