This project places “everyday beauty” at its core, embedding fashion presentation within domestic and lived-in spatial contexts to blur the boundary between fashion and daily life. It draws aesthetic value from real use, bodily experience, and the traces left by time and touch, celebrating imperfection and the understated beauty of texture. Materials such as recycled fabric, wood, and soft canvas—rich in temporal and tactile memory—are employed to present garments in non-traditional, touchable, and functional ways: hung on wooden frames, pinned to walls, or casually placed on everyday furniture. These design strategies emphasize direct interaction between clothing and the body, inviting users to discover beauty through repeated gestures of touch and use in daily life. Garments are no longer static display items, but living tools that generate emotional resonance with both space and people. In doing so, the project redefines beauty in fashion—not as a spectacle to be passively observed, but as something that naturally emerges through the emotional and physical interplay between people, objects, and their environments.