You’ve probably done the beach packing thing a hundred times. You throw a bikini in a bag, grab the nearest sarong, and tell yourself you’ll figure the rest out when you get there. And then you arrive, and the whole look feels like it was assembled by committee – nothing quite connecting, nothing feeling intentional. The bikini is great. The rest is chaos.
That’s the problem with most beach styling advice: it treats the swimwear as an afterthought and works backwards. The smarter approach is to start with a genuinely strong swimwear anchor – something with real design ambition – and build the entire look outward from there. That’s exactly what F**K Official, the Italian-designed beachwear brand produced in Puglia, makes possible. The pieces are bold enough to lead. Everything else just has to keep up.
Start With the Right Piece for Your Body and Your Mood
Before you think about cover-ups or sandals, you need to pick the swimwear itself – and that choice shapes everything downstream. F**K Official offers bikinis, monokinis, and men’s swim trunks, plus children’s pieces and parent-child matching sets if you’re heading out as a family. The range is genuinely wider than most design-forward brands manage without diluting quality.
For women, the bikini-versus-monokini decision is really a silhouette question. Bikinis give you flexibility – you can mix a stronger top with a lower-key bottom, or reverse that if you prefer. Monokinis do the opposite: they create one deliberate visual statement, which means you need less work from the rest of the outfit to achieve something coherent. If you tend to overthink coordination, a monokini is genuinely the easier starting point.
Men’s swim trunks from the SS26 collection come with that same unapologetic design language – structured cuts, fresh colorways, nothing that looks like it was designed to disappear into a resort pool deck. That matters when you’re building a look rather than just covering the basics.

The Colorway Matters More Than You Think
This is where most people get tripped up. You pick a swimsuit you love, then build the accessories in a completely different palette, and the final look reads as two separate outfits sharing the same person. Colorway discipline is the thing that makes beach styling feel intentional rather than accidental.
F**K Official’s SS26 collection adds new colorways – X36, X38, X41, X45, X46, X47 – which gives you a concrete starting point for your palette decisions. Let’s say you go with X45, a richer, deeper tone. Your cover-up should either pull directly from that family (same hue, different weight) or anchor the opposite end of the tonal spectrum – a true neutral like natural linen, bone, or a faded sand. What you want to avoid is a cover-up in a competing mid-tone. That’s the combination that looks accidentally mismatched rather than deliberately styled.
X36 reads differently – fresher, lighter. Pair it with white or off-white, and you get a clean Mediterranean look that’s almost architectural in its simplicity. Add a terracotta-toned bag and the combination suddenly has depth without complexity. Small choices. Big difference.
The most common beach styling mistake isn’t the wrong piece – it’s the wrong palette relationship between pieces. Get that right, and the rest falls into place.
Cover-Ups: The Layer That Makes or Breaks the Whole Look
Here’s where beach styling gets genuinely interesting – and genuinely difficult. A cover-up is doing more work than it appears to. It has to transition you from the water’s edge to lunch at a terrace restaurant without a full outfit change. It has to be practical enough to move in, but considered enough not to undercut the swimwear it’s covering.
With a bold Italian-designed piece as your anchor, you want a cover-up that doesn’t compete. Three approaches that actually work:
The linen shirt. Oversized, unbuttoned, worn like a jacket. Linen in natural or white tones works with virtually every colorway. It photographs well, it breathes, and it has enough structure to feel dressed rather than wrapped. This is the most versatile option – honest enough to say so.
The mesh or crochet dress. More beach-specific, less transitionable to lunch, but extraordinary for editorial shots and late-afternoon walks along the water. Works best when the crochet is a matching or complementary tone to your swimwear, not a contrast color fighting for attention.
The pareo or sarong. The fastest and most underrated option. Tied at the hip for a shorter silhouette, wrapped as a skirt for a longer one. With a structured Italian bikini top, a well-tied pareo reads as genuinely styled rather than improvised. It takes about thirty seconds to figure out, and the payoff is significant.

Footwear: The Part People Get Wrong First
Beach footwear has exactly one job: don’t undermine the rest of the look. That sounds simple, but you’d be surprised how often a genuinely strong swimwear-and-cover-up combination gets undercut by the wrong sandal.
With an Italian-designed swimwear anchor, the footwear should lean into that sensibility. Flat leather sandals – Grecian, strappy, minimal hardware – are the natural match. They’re comfortable enough for sand, elevated enough for the restaurant transition, and they don’t fight the Italian aesthetic. Platform espadrilles work in a similar way, with a slightly more relaxed, coastal feel.
What doesn’t work: rubber slides with branding logos, chunky sports sandals, or anything that reads as athletic rather than leisurewear. I’d argue even the most casual rubber slide undercuts a piece that was designed in Puglia and carries genuine Made in Italy positioning. The sandal doesn’t have to be expensive. It has to be coherent.
- Swimwear: anchor piece (pick colorway first)
- Cover-up: same tonal family or true neutral – never a competing mid-tone
- Sandals: leather or espadrille, minimal hardware
- Bag: straw or canvas, natural or complementary tone
- Sunglasses: oversized, frames that match the overall mood
- One metal accent: earrings or bracelet, not both competing
Accessories: Less Is the Rule, Not the Exception
With a brand that operates under the FK Crazy philosophy – freedom, individuality, nothing generic – there’s a temptation to pile on accessories and match the energy. Resist that. The swimwear is already doing the visual work. The accessories should support, not compete.
Sunglasses are non-negotiable and probably the highest-impact accessory decision you’ll make. Oversized frames in tortoiseshell or black work with almost any colorway. Round frames soften sharper geometric swimwear cuts. Cat-eye frames add a deliberate vintage Italian-riviera reference that pairs well with the brand’s Puglia origins.
Bags: straw or canvas, always. A structured straw tote in natural color is nearly universal – it transitions from beach to market to restaurant without drama. If you’re going smaller, a woven crossbody in a complementary tone works for the afternoon portion of the day when you’re past the water and into the town.
Jewelry: one metal accent, done intentionally. A single gold hoop earring. A simple chain bracelet. Not both competing for attention at the same time – that’s where it starts to read as assembled rather than considered. Actually, I’d go further and say that on the beach specifically, the less jewelry, the stronger the look. The swimwear is the statement. The accessories are the quiet agreement.
The Family Wardrobe Angle: Matching Without Being Precious
One thing F**K Official does that most design-forward swimwear brands don’t bother with: matching parent-child sets. For family beach trips, this is genuinely useful – not because coordinated family beach photos are mandatory, but because it removes a decision. You’ve already chosen your colorway. The children’s pieces work within the same palette. Done.
The key is not over-matching. A parent in X45 and a child in X45 reads as a deliberate styling choice. A parent in X45, a child in X45, and matching accessories for everyone reads as a production. Keep the swimwear coordinated and let everything else breathe independently.
The Honest Verdict
Building a beach look around F**K Official pieces works well precisely because the brand gives you a strong enough design anchor to work from. Italian production, seasonal collections with genuine colorway newness each cycle, and a range wide enough to dress a whole family from the same aesthetic vocabulary – that’s a combination that makes the styling decisions easier, not harder.
The one real limitation worth naming: because the pieces are bold by design, they require more considered coordination than a neutral swimwear anchor would. You can’t grab any random cover-up and call it done. If you’re someone who wants to pack a beach bag in four minutes without thinking, a more subdued brand might be the more practical choice. But if you’re willing to spend ten minutes on palette and cover-up selection, the result is a beach look that actually reflects a point of view rather than a default setting.
The brand operates both online and through physical retail locations in Italy, which validates the positioning in a way that most purely digital brands can’t match. And with free shipping available through the website and fresh colorways arriving each season, the practical barriers to trying the collection are lower than you might expect from a label at this design level. Start with one strong anchor piece. Build from the palette outward. That’s really all this requires.
