The rising men’s wear line Namacheko, designed by the siblings Dilan and Lezan Lurr, makes deceptively simple clothes that are, in fact, loaded with personal meaning. For example: A moss-green mohair peacoat, from the fall/winter 2018 collection, looks classic apart from its sculptural toggles. The biomorphic shape of the fastenings was inspired by the English sculptor Barbara Hepworth — a tribute to the designers’ mother, who is, as Hepworth’s was, a math teacher.

The brand also showed a navy blue sleeveless jacket made from fireproof fabric. The Lurrs, who founded the label in 2017, are inspired by their dual Swedish-Kurdish nationality, and the flame-retardant garment was a statement about the indestructibility of identity. “As a teenager growing up in Sweden, you just want to be like your friends — but you never lose being a Kurd,” says Dilan, “It’s a funny thing. You are what you are. I want to translate that into the garments.”

Dilan is on a short visit to Belgium, where Namacheko is manufactured — in part by Gysemans Clothing Group, a production and distribution company that has also worked with Raf Simons since his early years. But both Dilan, 29, and Lezan, 24, spend most of the year in Sweden, where they moved from Iraq with their family in 1997.