Deepnude V200 Premium Portable

A Milanese shoe brand used two v200 units to fly to Tokyo for a private client dinner. Instead of shipping 40 pairs of heels in cardboard boxes, they arrived in the gallery. The LED lid-lights illuminated the shoes against the velvet drawers. The result: 12 pairs sold on the spot, at an average of €1,200 each. The client’s quote: “It felt like the shoes were being unveiled in a museum.”

The moment of opening is choreographed. The lid releases with a pneumatic hiss (engineered for auditory satisfaction, akin to a luxury car door). The LED array fades up slowly. The tension grid rises 4cm automatically, lifting garments away from the case floor. This is not unboxing; it is a curtain rise. Psychologists note that this delayed, multi-sensory reveal increases the perceived value of the contents by an average of 34% compared to a standard suitcase.

The v200 is not a mass-market product. Its starting price (approximately $4,500–$7,500 depending on customization) positions it as a professional tool. The primary users are: deepnude v200 premium portable

Customization options include: monogrammed leather luggage tags, internal humidity sensors for vintage pieces, and even a sound module that plays a specific chime upon opening (used by one famous sneaker designer).


At its core, the V200 is a purpose-driven digital gallery. It features a 7.9-inch Ultra-Retina OLED panel calibrated specifically for the fashion color gamut (covering 110% of DCI-P3 and 98% of Pantone Fashion, Home + Interiors). Unlike consumer tablets, the V200 ships with a pre-calibrated "Silk Mode" and "Metallic Sheen" filter, which enhances micro-contrast to simulate the tactile feel of fabric through a screen. A Milanese shoe brand used two v200 units

It is encased in a milled aluminum chassis available in three finishes: Obsidian Black, Champagne Gold, and Limited Edition Runway White. The device weighs just 380 grams, allowing it to slide seamlessly into a clutch or blazer pocket.

What truly sets the V200 apart is its "Gallery Mode." When placed in a small aluminum docking stand (sold separately as the Atelier Stand), the device enters a loop exhibition state. At pop-up shops or trunk shows, the V200 acts as a silent salesperson, cycling through a high-definition runway video or a slow-motion macro video of beading and embroidery. Multiple units can be synced wirelessly via Bluetooth LE to create a synchronized multi-screen installation—a portable art gallery for the lapel. At its core, the V200 is a purpose-driven digital gallery

The V200 runs on a proprietary OS called Silhouette. It strips away all icons, notifications, and UI chrome. When the device is asleep, it looks like a polished slate of obsidian. A three-finger swipe switches between "Lookbooks," "Video Runway," and "Fabric Zoom." Double-tapping a garment instantly pulls up the SKU, price, and available colorways via RFID-synced catalogs.

Celebrity stylists, costume designers, and brand ambassadors no longer work in one city. They commute from Milan to Seoul to Los Angeles in 72 hours. The v200 is their portable atelier. It allows a stylist to carry 12 complete looks (including shoes and jewelry) for a red-carpet tour without checking a single garment bag.

For decades, fashion professionals have relied on a triage of subpar presentation methods: the heavy, physical lookbook; the unpredictable iPad screen (glare, fingerprints, and inaccurate color); or the laptop, which creates a barrier between the presenter and the client. For a stylist pitching a $20,000 handbag or a designer showcasing a silk collection, color accuracy and texture rendering are non-negotiable. A standard LCD screen flattens a silk charmeuse into polyester. The V200 solves this.