@lacoste x doublet🐊
Starting today, May 15th, “LACOSTE POLO FACTORY EVENT” will be held for 10 days at @lacoste_tokyo Harajuku store, reinterpreting the origin and future of the polo shirt.
For this event, doublet created collaborative pieces featuring an art object transforming from a polo shirt into a crocodile, along with a 3D crocodile floating inside the polo shirt.
Please come experience the pieces at the store.
LACOSTE原宿店にて、ポロシャツの原点と未来を再解釈するイベント「LACOSTE POLO FACTORY EVENT」が本日5/15より10日間開催されています。
doubletでは、ポロシャツからワニへと変化していくアートピースと、ポロシャツの中を漂う3Dワニのコラボレーションアイテムを制作しました。
ぜひ店頭で実際にご覧いただけると嬉しいです🐊
doublet Spring/Summer 2026, “ITADAKIMASU,” was created out of gratitude for the lives we receive, and respect for the human hands and labor behind them.
This season incorporates materials and processes rooted in primary industries into the making of the collection, including recycled yarn made from fishing nets, egg shell–derived materials, and collaborations connected to agriculture.
For this look, we focused not on the materials themselves, but on the people, labor, and time that surround them.
Things born from the places that support our daily lives continue on in another form.
Rather than explaining that relationship, we chose to present it as a landscape.
A symbolic example is the fishing nets that were actually used at Choshi Port.
For this collection, those nets were recycled, regenerated into yarn, and transformed into garments.
And the people wearing those garments are the very fishermen who once used those nets themselves.
This is not only about reconsidering discarded materials as resources,but also about showing how the things that have supported our lives can take on a new role and continue into the future.
In order to express that relationship not through explanation but through scenery,we asked the people who belong to that place to wear the clothes themselves for this look.
This LOOK is intended not only as a way of showing the garments,but as a visual that invites attention to the work, the time, and the cycle from which they emerge.
Photographer @ittetsumatsuoka
Styling @nono1016
Hair&Make up @ebaramakeup
Special Thanks @morikougyomou_official@choshi_budoushujouzoujo and 銚子漁協外川支所の漁師さんたち
doublet Spring/Summer 2026, “ITADAKIMASU,” was created out of gratitude for the lives we receive, and respect for the human hands and labor behind them.
This season incorporates materials and processes rooted in primary industries into the making of the collection, including recycled yarn made from fishing nets, egg shell–derived materials, and collaborations connected to agriculture.
For this look, we focused not on the materials themselves, but on the people, labor, and time that surround them.
Things born from the places that support our daily lives continue on in another form.
Rather than explaining that relationship, we chose to present it as a landscape.
A symbolic example is the fishing nets that were actually used at Choshi Port.
For this collection, those nets were recycled, regenerated into yarn, and transformed into garments.
And the people wearing those garments are the very fishermen who once used those nets themselves.
This is not only about reconsidering discarded materials as resources,but also about showing how the things that have supported our lives can take on a new role and continue into the future.
In order to express that relationship not through explanation but through scenery,we asked the people who belong to that place to wear the clothes themselves for this look.
This LOOK is intended not only as a way of showing the garments,but as a visual that invites attention to the work, the time, and the cycle from which they emerge.
Photographer @ittetsumatsuoka
Styling @nono1016
Hair&Make up @ebaramakeup
Special Thanks @morikougyomou_official@choshi_budoushujouzoujo and 銚子漁協外川支所の漁師さんたち
doublet Spring/Summer 2026, “ITADAKIMASU,” was created out of gratitude for the lives we receive, and respect for the human hands and labor behind them.
This season incorporates materials and processes rooted in primary industries into the making of the collection, including recycled yarn made from fishing nets, egg shell–derived materials, and collaborations connected to agriculture.
For this look, we focused not on the materials themselves, but on the people, labor, and time that surround them.
Things born from the places that support our daily lives continue on in another form.
Rather than explaining that relationship, we chose to present it as a landscape.
A symbolic example is the fishing nets that were actually used at Choshi Port.
For this collection, those nets were recycled, regenerated into yarn, and transformed into garments.
And the people wearing those garments are the very fishermen who once used those nets themselves.
This is not only about reconsidering discarded materials as resources,but also about showing how the things that have supported our lives can take on a new role and continue into the future.
In order to express that relationship not through explanation but through scenery,we asked the people who belong to that place to wear the clothes themselves for this look.
This LOOK is intended not only as a way of showing the garments,but as a visual that invites attention to the work, the time, and the cycle from which they emerge.
Photographer @ittetsumatsuoka
Styling @nono1016
Hair&Make up @ebaramakeup
Special Thanks @morikougyomou_official@choshi_budoushujouzoujo and 銚子漁協外川支所の漁師さんたち
Introducing the doublet + Sky High Farm Goods collection
Mud-dyed garments using a technique developed in Amami Oshima, where iron-rich earth leaves its mark.
Strawberry-inspired cotton fabric.
A floating waistline that sits just off the body.
Available now at skyhighfarmgoods.com
“Itadakimasu”
A Japanese expression of gratitude before eating, acknowledging the land, the food it produces, and the people whose labor makes it possible. And the starting point for our collab with longtime friends @__doublet__
Sixteen pieces walked doublet’s SS’26 runway presentation at Le Paysan Urbain, a network of agro-ecological and socially responsible farms growing food across Paris and its surrounding communities.
Suiting dyed using traditional mud dye techniques from Amami Oshima, Japan, where iron-rich earth leaves its mark on the fabric, custom cotton developed to echo the seeded skin of our strawberry icon, and a newly developed floating waist that creates the illusion of a detached waistline. Beautiful garments built on shared values.
Thank you Ino, Kaji, and team.
Available now at skyhighfarmgoods.com and select global doublet retailers.