
Solid Homme presents After Nature for Spring Summer 2027, a collection shaped by the tension between the natural and the artificial. The season starts from a human contradiction: the desire to understand nature, rebuild it and remove visible human action through total human control. That idea gives the collection its central charge, turning clothing into a study of invention, containment and outdoor life.
SPRING SUMMER 2027
The collection holds opposing ideas in careful balance. Function meets appearance, restrained foundations meet bolder interruptions, and familiar garments take on unfamiliar details. Solid Homme creates a wardrobe suspended between memory and invention, with pieces that avoid nostalgia while looking beyond strict futurism.

The season moves away from formal proposals and focuses on relaxed everyday archetypes. Workwear jackets, blousons and windbreakers lead the silhouette, giving the collection a practical outdoor direction. Washed silks and wrinkled outerwear suggest time, use and exposure. Lightweight silk blends bring movement to matching sets and shirts, while textured cottons and perforated surfaces recall fragmented shadows created by greenhouse glass and protective netting.
A violet nylon jumpsuit appears under a beige mac and rubber boots, completed with a grey boonie hat lined in a contrasting color. Technical hoods and hats add another layer of purpose. Magnifying glasses hang from the neck, turning observation into a wearable detail. Canvas and leather bags take cues from field equipment and foraging baskets, giving the looks a direct link to outdoor activity. A vivid red mesh vest cuts across a tan zip jacket, paired with washed denim shorts and a leather belt bag.

The palette starts with neutrals in foam, milk and muted green. Earthy shades ground the season, while canary, violet, cerulean and poppy red add sudden intensity. Washed and worn textures soften the colors, making them feel exposed to time and outdoor conditions. The brighter shades read like visual markers within a broader study of nature, artifice and human design.
The presentation strengthens the concept through a laboratory setting covered with yellow netting. Terrariums hold miniature ecosystems, turning nature into something observed, framed and contained. Convex lenses attached to the cases magnify fragments of these enclosed worlds. Models move between the terrariums, occupying a space shaped by preservation and invention.

















