tod’s ss26 | gommino club

Tod’s turned up the charm in Milan with a Spring/Summer 2026 menswear presentation that felt more like a laid-back garden gathering than a traditional runway show. The setting, Villa Necchi Campiglio, was the perfect backdrop for the debut of the Gommino Club, a concept that pays tribute to the house’s iconic driving shoe while celebrating the essence of la dolce vita: relaxed, refined, and always understated.

Matteo Tamburini’s second menswear collection as creative director took that idea and ran with it. Pieces were built for movement and ease, but cut with intention.  Unstructured jackets and softly draped trousers dominated the lineup, offering a sense of freedom and comfort without sacrificing sophistication. 

Another eye-catching look features a striped silk canvas shirt and matching trousers, reminiscent of classic Riviera leisurewear, rendered in sherbet tones that evoke lazy afternoons by the sea. The collection also shines with a tailored car coat in muted brown and camel checks, layered over a lightweight knit, offering both versatility and a touch of timeless sophistication. The palette is deliciously summer-infused: soft, sun-faded hues, light wool, and muted cream.

The standout fabric of the season is Pashmy, a silky-soft leather that’s been treated to feel almost like washed silk. It showed up in softly shaped bombers, a lightweight coach jacket, and an unstructured blazer. Linen played a supporting role, appearing in crêpe, satin and silk blends — especially strong in the new safari jacket, which felt both polished and practical. A newly developed Travel-wool, used for outerwear and fluid trousers, rounded out the materials with a cooler-weather option that still fits the easygoing brief.

Footwear, of course, circled back to the Gommino. The iconic rubber-pebbled sole was reworked across bubble soles, boat shoes, and a slipper-like style, while also appearing under chunkier loafers and sneakers.

Elsewhere, there were unstructured loafers in Pashmy and nappa, this time with a saddle-style metal buckle — just enough hardware to make it feel considered. Bags came in two key styles: a sleek Di Bag Folio tote and a trekking-style backpack in a mix of Pashmy leather and canvas. Even accessories leaned into texture, most notably the Greca Belt — half leather, half rope — available in a full palette of sun-washed shades.

Discover the collection here.

photography. Tod’s
words. Gennaro Costanzo