Jeanette Limas “La Puerta del Sol F/W 25”

There are collaborations that simply happen—and then there are moments of creative alchemy. Working with designer Jeanette Limas on her Fall/Winter 2025 collection La Puerta del Sol has been nothing short of transformative for our team at Wyché Studios, and I’m honoured to share a behind-the-scenes glimpse into this beautiful project.

A Collection Rooted in Renewal

From Jeanette’s own website, La Puerta del Sol is described as her Fall/Winter 2025 collection unveiled at New York Fashion Week, marking her seventh presentation at the event. The collection explores themes of rebirth, light, and transformation. As Jeanette puts it:

“This collection does more than dress bodies — its clothes emotions.”
Golden tones emerge as a visual gesture of light after darkness; texture and drapery become metaphors for movement, healing and presence.

What stood out to me immediately was the poetic ambition of the collection—how each silhouette, fabric and hue plays a role in the narrative of emerging from winter into the light of a new day. It felt like more than fashion; it felt like a story.

I aim to not just capture images, but channel the mood, emotion and voice of a brand into each frame. With Jeanette’s vision so rich and layered, we leapt at the chance to join the project.

I was personally excited for several reasons:

  • To collaborate with Jeanette Limas, whose journey—from the Dominican Republic to New York, and from student-designer to NYFW presenter—is deeply inspiring.

  • To translate a collection that is described in words (“rebirth,” “light,” “transformation”) into a visual language—via photography, lighting, texture, and mood—that Wyché Studios specializes in.

  • To help create imagery that supports Jeanette’s mission of thoughtful luxury—her commitment to craftsmanship and sustainability in her pieces being made-to-order in Spanish Silk or Spanish Polyester crepe, for example.

  • And simply, to step into a creative moment where the brand, designer and studio align around emotion, craft, story.

Working on La Puerta del Sol felt like opening a door (the “puerta”) into something luminous and expansive. The project also gave us an opportunity to push our own boundaries—exploring golds, warm tones, rich drapery, and dramatic textures in collaboration with Jeanette’s aesthetic.


I hope you enjoy the images and keep Wyche Studios in mind for your future projects.



Previous
Previous

Max Grudzinski's Journey from Photography Pro to Vermont Farmer

Next
Next

Embracing Ageless Beauty: How NYC Agencies & Mature Models Can Transform Your Brand