
Charles Jeffrey Loverboy introduces its Spring Summer 2026 collection, Prepared Piano, through a documentary and lookbook created in collaboration with Abbey Road Studios. The project functions as a recorded happening staged inside the legendary London studio. The collection draws direct influence from the process of music-making, particularly the experimental, analogue, and tactile practices long associated with Abbey Road.
SPRING SUMMER 2026
Creative director Charles Jeffrey frames the season through a clear position. He states, “In 2025, fashion for fashion’s sake feels vulgar.” With that stance, the collection shifts focus from surface aesthetics toward process. Music shapes both concept and output. The garments reflect how sound takes form through rehearsal, experimentation, and collaboration.


Loverboy researched Abbey Road’s archives to develop its visual language. The team examined photos and film material that documented the studio’s history. Across this imagery, collaborators appear during in-between moments, often defined by distinct styles. The collection distills archetypes from these figures. Authoritative executives appear in crisp tailoring and wide-lapelled suits. Musicians reveal a different rhythm, where formality loosens into function and expressive flare, particularly during the 1960s and 1970s. Engineers stand apart in white lab coats, working with recording tools like technicians inside a laboratory.
Prepared Piano translates these archetypes into contemporary forms. Loverboy reimagines the studio characters for 2026. The collection introduces Gen Z bedroom producers wrapped in fuzzy ears beanies and oversized hoodies. It also presents rockstars whose sleeves and hems flare outward like trumpets. Another figure appears in the form of an exacting technician wearing a supersized lab coat cut from heavy-duty shirting. Each look reflects a relationship to sound and production.


The collaboration with Abbey Road emphasizes innovation and play. Loverboy channels the studio’s future-facing approach into garments that echo experimentation. The collection recognizes both emerging creators and the innovators who preceded them. It references cultural institutions like Abbey Road that reshaped modern music through acts of subversion and technical exploration.

















