TWP Resort 2027
TWP Resort 2027 collection, runway looks, beauty, models, and reviews.

Reported by Vogue.
Thirty years in the industry, and Trish Wescoat Pound is having what the fashion world loves to call a "moment" — except hers is built on actual craft, not algorithm luck. The designer behind TWP has been quietly sharpening her version of elevated American sportswear for decades, and now, with a runway upgrade, a wider retail footprint, and the backing of fashion entrepreneur Andrew Rosen, the brand is finally getting the audience it deserves. According to Vogue, Resort 2027 was expansive — spanning new belts, a tuxedo-inspired eveningwear capsule with strategic sequins and feathers, and the signatures her loyal customers already reach for on repeat.
Prairie Roots, City Edit
Wescoat Pound — an Oklahoma native — doesn't hide where she came from. There's a quiet prairie sensibility woven through the collection: wrap skirts in paper-thin leather, shimmery coated ticker-stripe cotton that nods to aprons, and an update to her bestselling shirts that introduces snap buttons and leather shoulder accents with an unmistakable cowboy echo. It's the country girl who moved to the city, in garment form — and that tension is the whole point. The season's sharpest expression of it? Barrel-leg jeans paired with a cummerbund. High-low dressing, executed with zero effort and maximum intention.
What sets TWP apart isn't just the aesthetic — it's the thinking behind the construction. A wrap-front jacket with deep side vents lets the wearer reach straight into her pant pockets without contorting herself. A tool-belt-inspired bag wraps the waist for frictionless access. "Borrowed from him, but claimed by her," is how Wescoat Pound described her design philosophy — and that ethos extends to the functional details that only land correctly when a woman is actually designing for other women.
The Resort lineup also introduced just enough novelty to keep the returning customer intrigued without alienating her. A tunic with a leather neckline. A sporty pullover anorak. A dramatic jacket constructed from woven leather strips. None of it strays so far that the TWP woman feels like she's starting over — it simply gives her more to work with. As Wescoat Pound put it herself: "If you have a great piece of outerwear, your whole outfit is made."
After three decades of building something real, TWP's Resort 2027 is proof that slow fashion — the kind rooted in a genuine point of view — tends to outlast every trend that tried to rush past it.
Read the original at Vogue.


