
There’s a particular nostalgia embedded in late ’90s denim. The proportions felt right because they rejected the hyperform silhouettes of the decades before, the washes had character, and the attitude was defiantly effortless. Gap has spent the better part of the last few years returning to that vocabulary, and with Hailey Bieber, the brand has distilled that instinct into something genuinely coherent.
The Hailey Jean launches tomorrow (July 16), a limited-edition capsule built around two relaxed silhouettes: the Extra Baggy and the Low Rise Loose. Both are drawn from Bieber’s personal collection of vintage Gap pieces, refined through the lens of contemporary fit proportions and fabrication. Each pair carries “1996” detailing across the hardware and back patch, referencing both the year Hailey Bieber was born and the era the collection romanticizes. Her signature appears printed inside the pocket lining.
The silhouettes are rooted in what Jane Pattinson, SVP and Global Head of Design at Gap, describes as the way Bieber naturally wears denim. That distinction matters. This isn’t a design collaboration filtered through editorial ambition; it’s a product collaboration built on genuine wardrobe habit. The Extra Baggy comes in three washes across both in-store and online channels. The Low Rise Loose, available exclusively online, offers an additional three wash options. Priced at $89, the pieces are constructed from 100% cotton rigid denim engineered to break in over time, a principle that rewards wearing rather than babying.


The campaign arrives with the visual architecture of ’90s minimalism. Still photography by Mario Sorrenti, styled by Alastair McKimm, positions the jeans alongside classic Gap tees against clean studio backdrops, a visual syntax that anchors the collection firmly within brand heritage while avoiding pastiche. A campaign film directed by Charlie Di Placido with production design by Crystal Geller relocates the conversation to a recreated ’90s bedroom, soundtracked by The Cranberries‘ “Linger.” It’s deliberate nostalgia without irony, which is where most brand collaborations fail.
For a brand with the weight of Gap behind it, the decision to center a collection around actual wearing patterns rather than aspirational silhouettes represents a quiet shift in thinking. The collection speaks to what’s happening across denim more broadly: a move toward proportion and fit as primary categories, away from wash and damage as markers of design. Hailey Bieber‘s involvement carries weight precisely because she operates outside the fashion calendar ecosystem. She wears what moves through her life, which happens to be a lot of Gap. That alignment between person and product is uncommon enough to notice, and the collection reflects it clearly.
The limited-edition capsule launches July 16, 2026, across Gap channels globally (U.S., Canada, U.K., France, Japan, and select international markets).

















