Maduko: Dressing Up, Reimagined

Discover the Copenhagen-based kidswear brand redefining costumes

Child wearing a blue geometric star-shaped bonnet, raising arms playfully against a minimalist blue background
Child in a black pointed hat and yellow knit sweater eating cake at a wooden table, playful modern costume styling

text Enrico Fragale Esposito

 

With spring arriving, we stumbled upon MADUKO, a Copenhagen-based costume brand imagined by designers Anna Gammelgaard and Maja Raaschou. But no, this isn’t about dressing up for a single day circled in red on the calendar.
This is about rewriting what “dressing up” even means.
Because far from the predictable universe of Halloween capes or Carnival disguises, MADUKO operates somewhere else entirely: in that in-between space where play meets identity, and clothes become tools rather than instructions.

 

These pieces don’t imitate characters and don’t suggest ready-made narratives. Instead, they open possibilities. A pointed hat isn’t necessarily a wizard’s, a striped cape isn’t locked into a superhero, and a soft sculptural bonnet could be a sun, a creature, a crown… or something that doesn’t exist yet.
It’s a quiet but radical shift: removing the costume’s role as a script, and turning it into a starting point.

Two children wearing graphic capes and paper crowns, playing together in bold red, blue, black and white costumes
Child wearing a red and blue striped cape and crown, spinning dramatically against a deep blue background

There’s something deeply Nordic in the way MADUKO approaches design: clean lines, primary colors and shapes that feel intentional, almost architectural.
Everything is reduced to essentials, but never to the point of losing magic.

 

And maybe that’s the point: when you remove excess, imagination has more room to expand.

 

maduko.dk
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