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VMAN Trends

Ripped? No. Distressed? Hardly. The Blade Cut Is Something Else Entirely

A cut so precise it feels like an accident, the blade slash in menswear is both a rebellion and an invitation

By Dayne Aduna

March 14, 2025
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club culture

A whisper or a scream

In the strobe-lit dark of a club, you see them first—the slashes, the quiet rebellion stitched into the fabric of someone’s shirt.

Or maybe his pants, the sharp cuts revealing flickers of skin in quick pulses, like a message in Morse code.

naia ching
top the eight (at cul-de-sac) / eyewear saint laurent (at sunglass haven)
naia ching
jacket viktor / cardigan maison kitsune / pants cos / neckerchief massimo dutti

There’s something about the blade cut, how it rides the line between presence and absence. Between being seen and staying hidden.

It started somewhere between the underground and the algorithm, in places where fashion exists as a language rather than a product.

Not quite ripped, not exactly distressed, but deliberate. Intentional. A precise rebellion.

Masculinity, redefined in threads

At its core, the blade cut is about control. Unlike the chaotic tears of grunge or the utilitarian frays of workwear, this is a calculated exposure.

naia ching
top cos / pants gramicci (at commonwealth) / bag y-3
naia ching
all clothing cos / belt charm john varvatos

A cut so sharp it could have been a choice or an accident. A whisper or a scream.

In an era where masculinity is being redefined, the blade cut is both armor and vulnerability. It’s the art of covering up while still letting something slip through the cracks.

naia ching
top viktor / jewelry eirin
naia ching
top a.p.c. / shorts ami (at univers) / shoes balmain

A glimpse of collarbone. The suggestion of a hip bone beneath a low-slung trouser. The fabric is there, but so is the absence of it.

You’ll find it on the runway, sure, but more importantly, you’ll find it on the dance floor. On the streets. On someone waiting for the train at 2 AM, cigarette in hand, jacket slashed just enough to make you wonder if it was always meant to be that way.

The future is cut open

Fashion has always flirted with destruction—denim torn at the knees, leather worn to exhaustion—but the blade cut is something else.

naia ching
top thisisneverthat (at commonwealth) / pants a.p.c. / jewelry eirin
naia ching
all clothing cos / jewelry eirin

It’s not just about wear and tear. It’s about precision. About knowing exactly where to draw the line, and then slicing right through it.

The question now is: how far does the blade go?

Read the story in the pages of VMAN SEA 02: now available for purchase!

Photography Doc Marlon

Art direction Mike Miguel

Fashion Rex Atienza and Corven Uy

Grooming Anne Domingo (Nix Institute of Beauty)

Hair Bryan Eusebio

Photography assistant Joel Ramos

Fashion assistant Summer Untalan

Model Naia Ching (Cornerstone)

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