
Spring releases arrive with a clear direction, shaped by precision, material focus, and a shift toward adaptable design. Across fashion, accessories, and product, brands refine familiar formats instead of introducing excess, building collections that respond directly to how pieces function in daily use.
SPRING 2026
This selection brings together key launches that define the season’s pace, from reworked denim and modular carry systems to performance-driven activewear and heritage footwear updates. Each release holds a distinct position, while collectively outlining a broader movement toward clarity, structure, and long-term wear.

Premiere Soleil by Jimmy Fairly
Jimmy Fairly introduces Premiere Soleil for Spring, a collection shaped by the soft, warm light of the season’s first days. The Paris-based eyewear brand builds the release around a clear visual direction, where structured silhouettes reinterpret familiar shapes including oversized, aviator, round, and cat-eye frames. The palette draws from early spring tones, moving through tortoiseshell, caramel, and terracotta, then into lighter shades of butter yellow, pale pink, and sage. The result feels direct and easy to place within everyday styling, with each frame carrying a defined presence.
The women’s selection shifts between narrow, retro references and more angular, elongated forms, with styles such as The Cassi, The Jojoba, and The Maple setting the tone. The men’s offering follows a similar direction, pulling from ’70s and ’80s influences through metal-rimmed constructions and square frames like The Lime, alongside the aviator Parsley. Each piece is priced at $148, positioning the collection as an accessible entry into considered eyewear for the season.

PARSEL Introduces The Clutch
PARSEL expands its modular carrying system with the launch of The Clutch, a compact addition that builds on the East West Tote framework. Designed as a more precise, adaptable unit, it introduces the Hook Grip closure for secure, one-hand operation, alongside an interchangeable handle and shoulder guard that adjust to different modes of use. Engineered knit straps improve grip and control, while aircraft-grade aluminum hardware ensures durability. The Clutch also arrives as a liner-free construction, reinforcing the brand’s focus on clarity and reduction.
Developed under the direction of Nur Abbas, PARSEL continues to refine its system through scale and flexibility. The Clutch introduces a new Medium size, joining the existing Small and Extra Large formats and extending the system into three distinct proportions. Available in six colorways, Deep, Optic, Solstice, Nightshade, Velvet, and Oxide, the release maintains a controlled palette while allowing variation within a defined structure. Designed to function independently or as part of a larger system, The Clutch sharpens PARSEL’s approach to modular carry.

Sergio Tacchini Celebrates 60 Years with SS26
Sergio Tacchini enters Spring Summer 2026 with a collection that reflects six decades of Italian sportswear, anchored in the brand’s tennis legacy and shaped through a contemporary lens. Founded in 1966 by the Italian champion, the label built its identity on color, movement, and expressive design, shifting the visual language of tennis apparel away from strict uniformity. This season returns to that foundation, reworking archival silhouettes with a sharper, more current approach that aligns performance with everyday wear.
The collection moves between sport and lifestyle with ease, introducing lightweight fabrics, tailored track pieces, and coordinated sets designed for both activity and daily use. Tracksuits return in updated materials such as nylon, velour, and performance knits, while women’s offerings expand through dresses, skirts, and matching sets that balance function and form. Resort-driven elements, including relaxed cabana pieces and knitwear, introduce a Mediterranean sensibility, supported by a palette that combines sun-washed tones with neutral anchors. The result positions Sergio Tacchini within a broader conversation around sport’s role in shaping how we dress now.

Sperry x Aritzia
Sperry and Aritzia return for Spring 2026 with a second installment that builds on their ongoing partnership, introducing a focused lineup shaped by clarity and everyday use. The collaboration connects Sperry’s long-standing approach to boat shoe construction with Aritzia’s direction toward refined, wearable design. This season centers on two silhouettes, the Authentic Original 2-Eye Lug Boat Shoe and the Slim Jogger, each developed with attention to proportion, material, and function. The boat shoe keeps core elements such as the 360° lacing system and premium leather upper, while the added lug sole shifts its presence toward a more grounded, contemporary feel.
Alongside it, the Slim Jogger offers a more reduced form, designed with a low-profile shape, removable insoles, and interchangeable laces that introduce flexibility into daily wear. Both styles reflect a shared focus on adaptability, designed to transition easily across settings without losing precision in construction. The collection launches on March 24 through Aritzia channels, followed by Sperry on March 26, positioning the release as a continuation of a collaboration that refines familiar forms through subtle, deliberate adjustments.

SUSUMU Spring Summer 2026
SUSUMU introduces its Spring Summer 2026 collection titled Private Uniform, shaping a wardrobe around relaxed silhouettes and modular dressing. Produced in Seoul and grounded in Korean culture, the collection builds on layering through a mix of jersey, silk, and lace, paired with sporty materials that bring lightness and flexibility. “The SS26 ‘Private Uniform’ collection explores a pragmatic way of living by harmonizing traditional textured fabrics with technical, sporty materials,” says designer Doyoung Chloe Kim. The approach feels direct and wearable, with pieces designed to shift easily across daily routines while maintaining a clear structure.
Key designs include the Eun Trench in recycled nylon and cotton blends, alongside the Ori Pants developed in biodegradable corn-fiber polyester yarn. Relaxed blousons, technical hoodie jackets, and coordinated shorts extend the lineup, focusing on adaptability and ease. “We always seek to redefine the modern wardrobe through a meticulous study of materials and functional aesthetics,” Kim adds. The palette moves through grey, ecru, navy, brown, and black, with sharper accents in red, cobalt, lilac, and pink. SUSUMU continues to define its direction through material choices and precise construction, building a collection that supports everyday use without excess.

Dr. Martens Marks 65 Years of the 1461
Dr. Martens marks 65 years of the 1461 shoe with a focused Spring 2026 release that returns to the origins of the silhouette while refining its material presence. First introduced on April 1, 1961, as the second style after the 1460 boot, the three-eyelet design holds a distinct position within the brand’s history. Its structure remains direct, defined by the air-cushioned sole and yellow welt stitch, elements that shaped its identity across decades of use. For the anniversary, the Made in England factory in Northamptonshire produces a limited edition in Classic Calf leather, developed with C. F. Stead in Leeds. The “sepia grey” tone emerges through natural oils and waxes, creating a surface that shifts over time with wear.
The construction follows the original approach. Goodyear welted, grounded on the signature sole with grooved pattern, the shoe carries double stitching and the familiar yellow welt detail. Antique gold eyelets and waxed round laces introduce a subtle adjustment to the oxford profile, while a special swing tag references the Cobbs Lane factory. Alongside the 1461, Dr. Martens extends the same material treatment to a limited 1460 boot, reinforcing the link between the two silhouettes. The release stays anchored in production methods that rely on precision and material integrity, presenting the 1461 as a form that continues through time without interruption.

J.Crew and Lee® Denim Collection
J.Crew and Lee introduce a first-time collaboration that reworks American denim through a clear, contemporary lens. The capsule draws directly from Lee’s archive of workwear and heritage silhouettes, while J.Crew applies its East Coast sensibility to refine the outcome. The result centers on familiar pieces such as the Storm Rider jacket, western shirts, straight-leg jeans, skirts, and overalls, each adjusted with a sharper, more considered approach. The collection holds onto the directness of classic denim while adjusting proportion, finish, and styling to align with current expectations.
Material selection plays a central role, with Japanese selvedge denim from Kaihara and Kurabo shaping the foundation of the lineup. Custom hardware, brass finishes, and vintage-inspired labels reference Lee’s early 1970s visual language, grounding the collection in a specific historical moment without replicating it. Garment-dyed cottons, rib knits, and a custom J.Crew plaid introduce variation across categories, allowing the collection to extend beyond denim while maintaining cohesion. Designed to evolve through wear, the pieces focus on longevity and familiarity, positioning the collaboration as a continuation of American style rather than a reinterpretation detached from its origins.

Keke Palmer x Fabletics
Fabletics steps into Spring 2026 with a new collaboration featuring Keke Palmer, bringing a fresh energy to activewear that moves between workout and daily routine with ease. As the brand’s newest ambassador, Palmer anchors a 17-piece collection built around Fabletics’ signature PowerHold designs, combining strong visual direction with performance-driven construction. The pieces focus on support, compression, and flexibility, designed to carry through a full day that shifts from Pilates sessions to everyday movement without interruption.
The collection reflects Palmer’s pace and presence, shaped by her approach to wellness and constant motion. PowerHold fabric defines the core, offering structure and shaping while maintaining comfort across activities. Bold color-blocking, streamlined silhouettes, and practical details such as discreet pockets give the pieces a clear function, while layering options extend their use beyond the studio. With sizing from XXS to 4X, the release emphasizes accessibility alongside design, presenting a wardrobe that supports movement, confidence, and consistency from morning workouts to late-day plans.

















