Cricket’s precise, natural-fabric aesthetic is crossing into summer linen dressing – and the overlap in silhouette, color, and fabric logic makes it feel inevitable.
Author: Iris Duval
Swim cap silhouettes are surfacing in avant-garde headwear, with designers borrowing the smooth dome shape and close-fit construction for sculptural fashion statements.
Swim team warm-up jackets from thrift stores and vintage markets are showing up in off-duty model looks, styled against slip dresses, suiting, and kitten heels.
Archery club aesthetics – structured vests, leather tab accessories, and earthy palettes – are quietly crossing over into streetwear through function-first design and heritage sport references.
The polo shirt is quietly edging out the white button-down as an everyday staple, driven by shifting aesthetics, fabric innovation, and changing dress codes.
Lifeguard shorts are moving from beach patrol to high street rails this season, with bold color blocking and utilitarian proportions driving the trend.
Lacrosse pinnies are moving from prep school fields to downtown New York streets, worn as layered tops with trousers and long-sleeves by a growing crowd.
Fencing jackets are moving from the piste to the pavement. Here’s why the sport’s stiff, asymmetric silhouette is catching streetwear’s attention right now.
Padel’s relaxed, streetwear-adjacent court style is pulling fashion attention away from tennis’s rigid dress code – and brands are already responding.
Porcelain veneers are losing their dominance as patients push back against enamel removal. Enamel-first dentistry is reshaping what cosmetic dental care looks like.










