
BED j.w. FORD Spring Summer 2027, Lemon, begins with a scene from Cinque Terre. Last October, designer Shinpei Yamagishi saw two women carry chairs onto a sloping street at dusk. They placed them by the roadside, poured wine, and sat outside their homes as laughter moved through the evening. Nothing dramatic happened. The houses carried marks of generations, the women’s sun-browned faces held deep lines, and a lemon tree stood between them. After the glasses emptied and the women went inside, one traveler stayed there, unable to leave.
SPRING SUMMER 2027
Yamagishi returned from that memory with a question about richness. The answer did not arrive through grandeur or decoration. It came through a state of mind that could turn an ordinary day into a good one. He keeps that feeling provisional, aware that tomorrow may bring another answer.

The season loosens the severity long associated with the brand. Yamagishi lets tension fall away and moves toward relaxed sensuality, unpretentious fabrics, and clothes that invite air around the body. Outerwear largely disappears. In its place, the collection introduces cupro shirts with a worn-in look, slacks with rib-knitted waists, beach-ready shorts, and summer knits. Sheer bodies reveal tiny komon-like floral motifs, giving the clothes a trace of innocence. Washi paper brings a softer hand to the knits, and multistripes open another side of the brand’s visual language.
A Mediterranean brightness runs through the collection. Rolled sleeves suggest a casual gesture rather than a styled pose. The clothes seem ready for movement, sun, and a day that carries no need for performance. Sandal-style footwear developed with SUICOKE uses crushed sequins that catch light with a muted glow. Silk yarn mixed with linen allows washed wrinkles to look familiar, as if the garments already belong to someone’s daily life.

A pinstriped tailored jacket stays composed inside the collection’s most relaxed mood. A pinky ring developed with PREEK sits on the little finger and adds a small, affectionate detail. These elements keep precision in play, even as the season moves closer to softness. The man imagined here feels effortless and free-spirited, a figure the brand has followed for years.
The collection imagines a modest day among family and friends, with wind moving through the space, greenery offering shade, and a few flowers marking the setting. Yamagishi asks what kind of day might erase distance and divisions, a day that honors each person’s today equally and makes them want to return tomorrow.

The lemon appears on one shirt. Yamagishi borrowed the season’s lighthearted title from the tree that stood between the two women. When asked why the lemon mattered, he offers no neat answer. He simply remembers that a cat stood there too. BED j.w. FORD leaves the meaning open, placing a single fruit where an explanation might have been.

















