Fashion

The Garment Resort 2027

The Garment Resort 2027 collection, runway looks, beauty, models, and reviews.

By Elliot O·Jun 1, 2026·2 min read
The Garment Resort 2027

Reported by Vogue.

There's something quietly radical about designing for a woman who dresses entirely for herself. For Resort 2027, The Garment's Charlotte Eskildsen found her reference point not in a runway trend cycle or a fashion capital mood board, but in Lille Mølle — a 17th-century Copenhagen windmill-turned-home tucked near Christiania. The historic landmark serves as both the lookbook's setting and a conceptual blueprint, with some of the collection's jacquards directly referencing the site's original upholstery materials.

According to Vogue, Eskildsen described the space as one where "the rooms are there to be lived in, rather than just for display" — and she translated that ethos into clothes for a woman who dresses "not for spectacle, but for herself." The result is an intimate wardrobe: lace, bloomers, silk slips, and pajamas rendered in a soft golden glow that could read equally at a dinner party or a solo Netflix marathon. It's at-home dressing without the apology or the Instagram-ready performance of it.

Structure Beneath the Softness

The Garment's signature move is balancing femininity against what Eskildsen calls "masculine-coded references" — and here that tension is doing real work. A pair of narrowly cut trousers paired with an asymmetrically closed vest created a precise, intentional drape. A silk slip dress engineered with one spaghetti strap and one sleeve subtly shifts the weight of the fabric, giving it movement that feels both accidental and exact. It's the kind of construction detail that rewards the wearer, not the observer.

The range in texture and reference kept things from reading as a single mood. A cropped Tyrolean boiled-wool jacket arrived trimmed in passementerie with frog closures — rigorous enough to feel architectural, whimsical enough to feel personal. A scalloped-hem shorts set with a lace-edged cape carried the energy of a very grown-up, very knowing Little Red Riding Hood. Bloomers made an appearance too, which apparently is a thing happening in more than one collection right now.

When the best clothes in a room are the ones designed for no one else's gaze, The Garment is making a persuasive case that dressing for yourself is the most sophisticated act of all.


Read the original at Vogue.

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