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Zero Gravity Dressing — New Resort ‘26 Collection
SummerWRITTEN BY KATERYNA LAKOMOVA

Zero Gravity Dressing — New Resort ‘26 Collection

Our new Resort Collection ’26 Zero Gravity Dressing drifts in like salt air on skin—soft and unforced. A wardrobe for the days when everything feels lighter, including you. 

Airy linens, softened tailoring, sun-washed hues—each piece designed to loosen the grip of routine. There’s movement in the fabrics, quiet in the palette, freedom in the silhouettes. Inspired by the wind that stirred on set and the stillness it left behind, our resort outfits capture a state of lightness—and we invite you to escape into lightness with us.

Born with the wind

The story began with a gust. One of those wild winds that rise up along the cliffs and steal your breath for a moment. It caught hems, lifted hair, made silhouettes float on set. But it also gave us the concept—we didn’t plan it, but we felt it.

That moment—fabric suspended mid-air, models stepping through the salt-silvered haze—became the frame for what we wanted to convey through our campaign. Not limited to what to wear when it’s warm, but how to feel when you let go. Of schedules, expectations, stress, noise. Vacation clothing that doesn’t press you into shape but expands with you and gives space. 

From there, the direction was clear: softened tailoring catches the breeze, sun-washed colors blend with the coastline, infinite shades of sea and sky. Beach clothes that look like exhalation—airy linens, gentle cottons, pieces that hang loose enough to make you forget you’re wearing them at all.

We called it Zero Gravity Dressing for the sensation—the feeling of being momentarily airborne. Present, but lighter. Closer to the wind than to the ground.

Women’s Resort Wear

Gone are the days when luxury resort attire meant stiff silhouettes and heavy fabrics. We dress to breathe and to move. In our Resort wear for women, we chose natural materials, breezy fits, sun-washed tones that go from shoreline to dinner table. These are pieces made for conscious presence.

Faded yellow utility

Sun-washed yellow meets utilitarian style in this understated pairing. The white Cinched cotton top by House of Dagmar offers structure—a gentle nod to shirting. Paired with the Tapered-leg cargo trousers by Erika Cavallini in a faded lemon tone, the look speaks a quiet language of light as both pieces breathe. We tried to reimagine utility for stillness, slowness, standing barefoot in morning light before the world asks anything of you. Have we succeeded?

Baby blue

The V-neck flared linen midi dress by 120% Lino in baby blue—like the sea meeting the sky on a quiet horizon, its tone mirrors the coast. Cut in a breezy midi length, it moves with the wind and is made for open balconies and sun-slow afternoons. Paired with Hereu’s Asymmetrical woven sandals that serve as footwear and hand-held poetry, the look invites imperfection—scuffed heels, tousled hair, bare feet tracing salt-worn paths.

Business coastal

Some call it business casual, we call it business coastal. The Oversized blazer by House of Dagmar in white—light as sea foam, woven from organic cotton—is what summer evenings demand when the air cools and the sky turns lilac. Beneath it, the Striped cotton pants from Beige Brown walk the line between dressed and undone, their pajama style made for barefoot café stops, beachside emails, or impromptu dinner plans. It’s a uniform for the unbothered, relaxed enough to forget you're wearing it.

Men’s Resort Wear

Once upon a boarding pass, vacation meant linen suits starched to perfection and shoes you couldn’t sprint in. Luckily, we’ve evolved. Today’s Resort wear for men is about ease—a relaxed tee, linen shorts, short-sleeved shirts, slip-on sandals. No ties, no stress. These pieces are designed to match the tempo of your getaway.

Head-to-toe linen

Head-to-toe linen isn’t a trend—it’s a heatwave survival strategy with style credentials. In this look, the humble Linen basic t-shirt by 120% Lino and the Drawstring linen shorts by Les Deux transform into a uniform of quiet luxury, all thanks to linen’s natural charm: breathable and moisture-wicking. It creases the way summer should—softly and beautifully. The Interwoven mule by Hereu finishes the story with the same ease. 

Ready to swim

Ready to swim means ready for anything. The Short sleeve linen patch-pocket shirt by 120% Lino in white on top, the Stripe swim shorts from Les Deux below—not that anyone would know. These aren’t just made for the water; they’re casual enough for terrace lunches, seafront strolls, spontaneous detours into the waves. No change of clothes, no change of pace—just one look that carries you from saltwater dips to sunlit Aperols. 

Shades of blue

An ensemble made of sea and sky. The pale blue Long sleeve linen shirt catches the breeze like a sail, navy Drawstring-fastened linen trousers by 120% Lino ground the look with depth, and the tied Fleece sweatshirt from Tiger of Sweden—just a whisper deeper—waits patiently for sundown. These are gradients of calm, each shade telling a story of still water and open air you only find on holiday evenings. For when the sun slips lower and the wind leans in—you won’t need to rush inside.