A Collection That Resists the Spring Cliché
Spring/Summer collections, for most brands, are an annual exercise in noise. Bright colours. Trend signals. The marketing team’s idea of “fresh.” It’s exhausting to look at, and it ages badly – usually within about six months of the season ending. The Carhartt WIP Spring/Summer 2026 collection does the opposite. It’s restrained. The colour palette is muted. The prints are deliberate. And the result, somehow, is a collection that feels more confident than the louder ones around it.
Restraint is hard to pull off in fashion. It can read as boring. It can read as a brand running out of ideas. The trick is to make the restraint feel deliberate – like a choice rather than a default – and that’s exactly what SS26 manages to do.
The Pieces Worth Watching
A quick tour. Not every piece in the collection – just the ones that reward attention.
The S/S Travon Shirt – €119
The S/S Travon is the collection’s quiet anchor. The Duck Feather print – a small, repeating pattern that reads as a solid from a distance and reveals itself up close – is the kind of detail that fashion editors notice and Instagram never quite captures. The shirt itself is cut generously without being oversized, which is the right cut for the silhouettes the brand has been refining over the last few seasons. In Cypress green, it’s the standout colour. In black, it’s the safe one.
The S/S Sean Hamilton Shirt – €109
Carhartt WIP’s collaborations with artists are part of what gives the brand its longevity. The Sean Hamilton shirt is a strong example of how to do it. The print is genuinely interesting – it doesn’t feel like a generic graphic slapped onto a blank tee. The shirt construction is the same as the rest of the SS line, which means the print sits inside a garment people actually want to own. That’s a higher bar than most artist collaborations clear.
The Women’s Georgia Shirt Jac – €149
One of the more interesting pieces in the women’s drop. A shirt-jacket – “shirt jac” in the spec – in destroyed-wash black, with the kind of weight that lets it sit comfortably between a shirt and a light jacket. The cut is more relaxed than the women’s wear from a few seasons ago, which reflects a broader shift the brand has been making toward roomier silhouettes across the board.
It’s the kind of piece that quietly displaces several other items in a wardrobe. Wear it over a tank. Wear it open over a tee. Wear it like a heavy shirt under a coat in the shoulder seasons. It’s the SS26 women’s piece worth the spend.
What the Collection Tells Us About the Brand’s Direction
Three threads run through SS26. First, the silhouettes keep getting slightly more relaxed without crossing into oversized-for-the-sake-of-it. Second, the prints are doing more interpretive work than the colour palette – which is the right call when the palette is intentionally muted. Third, the collaborations are tighter and more deliberate than they were a few seasons back. Sean Hamilton, Tyers, the smaller artist tie-ins – all of them feel like considered choices rather than collaboration-for-collaboration’s-sake.
That direction reads as a brand that knows exactly who its customer is and isn’t trying to chase a new one. In a market where most labels are desperately reaching for younger demos via TikTok-shaped collections, that confidence is refreshing. It also tends to be the strategy that builds the longest-lasting brand equity, which Carhartt WIP – thirty years into its European arc – clearly understands.
The Things Worth Naming as Less Successful
It’s not a perfect collection. A few of the shorter pieces – the Brader Short specifically – feel like they’re working harder to be SS-coded than they need to. The colour story across some of the lighter pieces drifts slightly toward generic spring tones. A handful of the t-shirt graphics don’t quite land. None of these are fatal, but they’re worth saying.
Most disappointing, honestly, is that some of the strongest pieces – including the Georgia Shirt Jac and the better Travon variations – sell out fast and don’t restock. That’s a market signal more than a design choice, but it makes the collection harder to actually own than it should be.
The Take, Summarised
Carhartt WIP SS26 isn’t a fireworks collection. It’s a working wardrobe collection – the kind that delivers pieces you’ll actually wear in three years, not pieces you’ll be embarrassed about by September. The restraint is the strategy. The strategy is working. And if you’re going to invest in one piece, the S/S Travon Shirt in Cypress or the Georgia Shirt Jac in black are the two that pay back hardest over time.
