For Fall/Winter 2026, TWP leans into a quiet kind of duality. Founder Trish Wescoat Pound imagines a woman shaped equally by city life and country escape for a collection that moves fluidly between the two without conflict. Tailoring remains central, but it’s softened. Plaid trousers are cut wide and easy, paired with refined cashmere coats that feel as natural in a boardroom as they do beside a fire. There’s a sense of practicality throughout, though nothing feels purely functional. Even the most grounded pieces carry a certain elegance, whether it’s a double-lapel blazer or a coated canvas trench layered over fine knits.

The palette stays tightly controlled, hovering in a spectrum of soft neutrals that echo winter landscapes rather than overpower them. Texture does most of the talking. Woven leather, paper-like finishes, shearling, and vegetable-tanned lambskin add depth and tactility, inviting a closer look.

Outerwear stands out as the anchor. Bombers, shaggy coats, and structured jackets are designed to handle the elements while still holding their own in more polished settings. It’s clothing that adapts without needing to change, reflecting a wardrobe built on continuity rather than reinvention.

At its core, the collection feels steady and self-assured. It doesn’t chase extremes. Instead, it offers something quieter, a balance between movement and stillness that feels particularly relevant right now.

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