Skip to content

Cart

Your cart is empty

Continue shopping
Spring 1 2026

Spring 1 2026

Feb 20, 2026

Our first spring collection of 2026 debuts this coming Thursday February 26th. Spring 1 includes our Flower Tee in superfine Merino, Collared YUCK Sweater, superfine merino sweaters, cotton Bind Off Tees, and finally our first Woven Trouser in a sturdy cotton twill.

We shot this collection at my favorite hotel in the Berkshires, Tourists. 

Model: Catherine Peerson

Photography: Apparition

There was a full foot of snow on the ground the morning we arrived-thick, quiet, and luminous. The Berkshires felt hushed in that particular way only heavy snowfall can manage, every branch outlined in white, every path softened into a gentle curve. The buildings at Tourists sat low and woodsy against the drifts, smoke lifting faintly into a sky that promised warmth despite the cold. We stayed in their house 1388 Massachusetts Ave.

Inside, it was all light.

The sun came in strong and golden, pouring through wide windows and bouncing off the snowbanks outside so that the rooms seemed lit from two directions at once. The brightness felt almost spring-like beaming, optimistic while the world beyond the glass remained undeniably winter. That tension became the mood of the shoot: warmth against frost, bare wood against white landscape, soft knits glowing in sharp alpine light.

Outside, the snow muffled our footsteps. Inside, the sunlight warmed our shoulders. It felt like standing between seasons—exactly where Spring 1 belongs. With a warm pet nearby of course.  Making her modeling debut, meet my dog Toad.

And this season, there are two meaningful pieces of newness woven into the story.

First: our Made in Nara socks, arriving in April. Crafted in Nara, Japan—a region with a deep history of sock production—they bring a different kind of intimacy to the collection. They’re the layer closest to the body, the quiet foundation. Shooting them against snow felt poetic: a reminder that even the smallest pieces carry intention. A bright sock peeking out against a white drift. A flash of color against boots. A soft, precise knit born from generations of technical expertise. More on this later.

Second: our woven pants, made in Portugal. This marks an expansion of our language—moving beyond knit as the sole foundation and building a fuller wardrobe around it. The Portuguese mills bring structure and durability; the silhouette is relaxed but grounded. In the light-filled rooms at Tourists, the pants held their shape beautifully pleats catching sun, fabric warming to the body. Against the snow, they felt practical and romantic at once.

And throughout the day, the train passed by.

Not loudly, not disruptively—but steadily. A low, rhythmic presence cutting through the stillness at intervals, then fading again. It became part of the atmosphere: the peaceful repetition, the reminder of movement beyond our snowy cocoon. Each time it rolled through, we’d pause for just a moment, listening as it moved past the windows and into the distance.