Look great in any of these swimwear pieces from the Kiwi Moontide swimwear range, from halter neck bikinis to printed swimsuits, Moontide create funky and light bikini pieces. Moontide has combined anchors and the classic navy and white horizontal stripes with mosaic motifs and other forms of art and design from the Near East.
Moontide is one of UK Swimwear's favourite new designers. They have some of the most fascinating designs in a long time with a wonderful heritage and pedigree behind them that makes their work pretty inspiring. Moontide is one of the newest brands in the swimwear world, relatively speaking. They are particularly young compared to their success and meteoric rise to one of our favourite brands. It was founded in New Zealand in the year 1980 making it quite the junior compared to our other partnered design houses, some of which trace their origin back to nearly a century.
What Is Moontide's History?
Being a young designer has many benefits. The two big ones are the twin pillars that make a fashion swimwear brand great. Namely, Moontide has passion and inventiveness, which they have in heaps. Many hip young designers like Moontide swimwear are passionate and full of vitality. Their collections always reflect their talent and their insistence on making the best possible designs they can. And for the inventiveness part, that is pretty easy to grasp too. The newest names in whatever world you care to mention are always the most creative one. They have a fresh perspective that is unbeatable and they always tried and make a name for themselves by breaking new ground, and we all get some of the most delightful new pieces out of it. But an even bigger part of the reason why Moontide is so impressive is their origins. They are a fashion housed based in none other than the great Kiwi nation of New Zealand. So Moontide swimwear is naturally influenced by the beauty of the one of the world's most gorgeous coastlines, and among the most beautiful interiors for that matter. So it's pretty easy to see a Moontide bikini always has a great source of inspiration. The design team simply casts a gaze out into the wilderness and them and they get plenty of inspiration for gorgeous and delightfully attractive swimwear designs. This is why you see so many great designers from Italy, Spain and Australia, and now we have another wonderful entry in our family of designers, this time from the Kiwis, that we think is just as gorgeous as any of their contemporaries.
What Kind Of Fashion Does Moontide Design?
So what does Moontide swimwear have to offer us? What is it about their range that is making us rave about it, here at UK Swimwear? Well in their first few seasons, they've had a few different sources of inspiration. The first is the always classic nautical theme. The second is arabesque or Middle Eastern design and interior decor. So you might find that Some of these designs are a blend of the two. Other stick to one particular motif or theme. We think it is the very epitome of creative and innovative for Moontide to have bikini bottoms with an arabesque pattern and then make the top have a different but complimenting naval pattern as well.
Who Is Moontide Designed For?
So who is Moontide for? What is their target group and who are they aiming their swimwear at exactly? Well, whilst we at UK Swimwear believe anyone should feel confident enough to wear any kind of swimwear they want, it's clear that Moontide are use of complex designs tells us a lot about who they design for first and foremost. These designs are complex and rich, but are not at all over the top or too bold. Also, they are relatively affordable and have a lively, youthful spirit to them that suits a younger audience quite well. Overall, we would say that Moontide is made with the young jet setter in mind. The twenty-something or the young woman in her early thirties who wants gorgeous swimwear without having to break the bank. So if you want young, spirited and gorgeous items of swimwear made by those who really care about creativity, look no further than Moontide.
Read More