What does 760,000-year-old lake water have to do with urban survival gear? For Stone Island, it’s the jumping-off point. The Spring/Summer 2026 collection draws inspiration from Mono Lake, a high-desert saltwater basin that supplies Los Angeles with drinking water. This metaphorical connection explores the contrast between wilderness and city, nature and the systems that redirect it.
The result is a collection that feels elemental. You can see it in the colour palette alone: deep, washed-out blues that echo the lake’s surface and sunbaked browns that pull from the surrounding desert. From there, the materials do most of the talking. There’s double-waxed cotton ripstop, pigment-treated canvas, and reflective outerwear sprayed by hand to mimic the look of frozen water.
Stone Island’s long-standing obsession with fabric experimentation continues, though this season it leans further into unpredictability. The standout is a heat-reactive metallic hooded jacket: ripstop nylon coated in a temperature-sensitive resin, with a foil lining that gives it a stark, high-performance edge. A new take on reflective technology sees micro glass spheres sprayed onto super-light nylon, creating a cracked-ice effect. The down jacket version is finished with asymmetric zips and vertical quilting, pushing the language of utility somewhere more sculptural.
Elsewhere, waxing becomes a form of expression, not just weatherproofing. One cotton canvas field jacket is treated with resin on the inside and wax on the outside, creating a dual-tone depth. Another bomber in waxed leather shows off the grain of the hide, softened with PrimaLoft® insulation for cross-season wear.
Even the overshirts get a makeover: garment-dyed ripstop is layered with two pigmented wax coats, emphasising texture and holding back the usual wear-and-tear. Knitwear steps up, too. A heavyweight chenille sweater is hand-rolled with dye under uneven pressure, building a pale frosted dégradé finish.
Sub-lines evolve alongside the main drop. The Ghost capsule receives a new seasonal colour, Corteccia, a muted tone that complements its monochrome identity. Marina revisits its classic sailing jacket, while Stellina introduces scuba detailing for the first time. The brand’s reawakened Denim Research division pushes further, experimenting with enzyme bleach dyeing and an oxford nylon take on denim that prioritises structure over stiffness.
Stone Island has always found poetry in the process, and this season is no exception. Whether sprayed, waxed, dyed, or faded, nothing here is static. Everything reacts to heat, pressure, and the elements, just like Mono Lake, reshaped by time and human need.
Discover the collection here.
photography. Stone Island
words. Gennaro Costanzo











































































































































































































