Fe Noel

Lots of millennials live in their parents’ basement, but Felicia Noel runs her fashion label out of it. Every garment from the Brooklyn native’s Fe Noel line — gorgeous silk caftans, pajama pants and button-up blouses — is stitched together in the lower level of the Crown Heights home where she grew up; her mother still owns the building and runs a day care upstairs.

Noel started her own line in 2014 — she had owned a streetwear boutique in the same neighborhood before that — but in the past year, she’s really taken off. Michelle Obama wore her orange silk shirt and matching pants on stage during her “Becoming” tour. Beyoncé donned a ruffled, off-the-shoulder top from a previous collection for her husband Jay-Z’s birthday party. One dress Noel designed — featuring an Africanized version of the Renaissance painting, “The Birth of Venus” — went viral on Instagram.

Now the Grenadian designer is — amazingly — making her solo New York Fashion Week debut this season. And although she’s poised for big things, she isn’t quite ready to move from Mom’s quite yet.

“We have a good thing going on here,” she told The Post in August. “We’re staying with our Brooklyn roots.”

Sukeina

Omar Salam was fashion’s best-kept secret. Then supermodel Naomi Campbell arrived at a 2018 event wearing a dramatic white cape and a sexy knit dress (above) from his label, Sukeina, and everything changed. Now, the Senegalese designer — who worked for Sonia Rykiel and Christian Lacroix before launching Sukeina in 2012 — has outfitted Natalia Vodianova and joined the Council of Fashion Designers of America. He’s known for origami folds, feather trims and va-va-voom silhouettes, so expect his latest to be bold and sexy.

Collina Strada

Designer Hillary Taymour has been quietly making eco-conscious clothes for more than a decade. But last season, her colorful show, set in a farmers market at Stuyvesant Square Park, proved to be a breakthrough: confronting climate change with lightness and hope instead of doom and gloom. The cast included her usual diverse array of models — but this time, they were smiling, chomping on apples, carrying their babies and wheeling shopping carts. The tie-dye slip dresses, floral bodysuits and rhinestone bikini tops had editors and celebs swooning: Singers Halsey and Rosalía have recently worn Taymour’s exuberant threads.

Sandy Liang

Liang has elevated the humble fleece jacket from Silicon Valley staple to major fashion statement. Her luxe takes come lined in leopard print, adorned with neon zippers and topped with fluffy Peter Pan collars. After her first New York runway show in September — featuring her signature fleeces, as well as diaphanous ruffled shirts, fun tulle skirts and leather jackets — the Asian-American designer is riding high, with a new 1990s-flavored collaboration with Vans, featuring bucket hats, fanny packs, apparel and sneakers landing Feb. 21.

Private Policy

Chinese designers Siying Qu (left) and Haoran Li — who met while studying at Parsons — dedicate each of their Private Policy collections to a socio-political issue, from raising awareness of enslaved fishermen to combating Asian-American stereotypes. It’s no wonder LGBTQ hero Billy Porter is a fan. Despite their high concepts, their clothes are refreshingly down-to-earth and cool: biodegradable utility jackets, shimmering quilted vests, colorful harnesses and sharp suits. We can’t wait to see what topic they’ll tackle this season.