Crochet for Men, and Everything That Comes With It
- ravidhkn

- 10 hours ago
- 2 min read
Crochet didn’t ask to be part of menswear, it just slipped in quietly, softened the edges, opened something in the body, and suddenly what used to feel fixed started to move.
For a long time, knitwear lived in the background, associated with comfort, with tradition, with something safe, but contemporary knitwear doesn’t behave like that anymore, it doesn’t stay in place, it stretches, reveals, clings, sometimes almost disappears
This is where crochet for men becomes interesting, not as a trend, not as a statement, but as a shift you can feel before you can name it
The body reacts differently inside crochet, the tension between exposure and softness creates something unfamiliar, something that doesn’t sit easily inside traditional masculinity
And maybe that’s the point.


Photo by Michael Liani

Photo by Roee Bokobza
Fashion has been slowly letting go of structure, moving away from rigid tailoring and allowing space for garments that follow the body rather than control it. Handmade knitwear fits exactly into that space, not perfect, not industrial, but precise in a different way
each piece holds the movement of the hand that made it, the rhythm of the stitch, the slight irregularity that makes it alive
Crochet fashion doesn’t hide that, it leans into it.
You see it in the rise of contemporary knitwear designers, in the way textures are no longer decoration but the main event, in the way garments become something closer to objects, or maybe something closer to skin. There is also something more intimate happening, especially when crochet moves into lingerie, the scale changes, the relationship to the body becomes direct, almost confrontational, soft materials, open structures, nothing to hide behind
It’s not about exposure for its own sake, it’s about removing the distance between the garment and the person wearing it. That’s where things shift.
Crochet lingerie for men doesn’t try to fit into existing categories, it creates its own language, somewhere between vulnerability and control, between ornament and function. And this is where brands like HKN Studio operate, not trying to redefine knitwear in a loud way, but slowly pushing it somewhere else, treating yarn like a material you can sculpt with, letting garments grow instead of forcing them into predefined shapes
The result doesn’t feel finished in the traditional sense, it feels ongoing, like something that could still change. Maybe that’s why contemporary knitwear feels so relevant right now, because it refuses to be fixed, because it allows the body to exist without correction
And once you feel that, it’s hard to go back
explore crochet, texture, and sculptural knitwear at HKN Studiohttps://www.hknstudio.com/




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