Look 4

Look 4

Look 4 merges HALUNK’s industrial construction vocabulary with the raw, textural visual world of Alessandro Painsi. The silhouette uses Kvadrat wool upholstery fabric as its architectural base, giving the trenchcoat a dense, sculptural weight.
The garment is cut directly from a large-scale painting by Painsi, placed as a dominant center-back panel and looping through the belt to the front pocket as a continuous artwork. Hardware is distressed, industrial and metallic — echoing the grit of the Port of Aalborg, our founders home city and the environment where Painsi’s artistic practice is rooted.
The result is a functional monument: a trenchcoat as a moving canvas, grounded in place, memory and heavy materiality.

 

TRENCHCOAT

Crafted from grey Kvadrat wool upholstery fabric, giving the coat a structural, architectural drape.

Cut directly from a large painting by Alessandro Painsi, used as a key visual centerpiece on the center back, framed by a loose, floating yoke that enhances movement and depth.

Features a front oversized sculptural pocket—special-shaped with both a side hand opening and a slanted chest opening secured with a zipper. The painting runs through this pocket, functioning as an enlarged belt loop and creating a continuous artwork across the garment.

Front closure made with hand-distressed metal quick-release buckles paired with steel wire loops—a raw, industrial fastening referencing shipping equipment and harbor machinery.

Comes with a unique integrated belt, featuring the painting as a central band and finished with an industrial buckle for a heavy, utilitarian final touch.

Fully lined with recycled polyester, printed with a custom illustration from your Portland Collection, depicting industrial waste materials found at the Port of Aalborg—bridging your personal origin story with Alessandro’s creative universe.

 

WIRED TOTE BAG

Structured tote bag made from the same grey Kvadrat wool.

Reinforced with internal wiring to hold a sculptural, box-like form.

Designed as an extension of the trenchcoat’s architectural silhouette.

Look 4