Combining light tailoring, breathable fabrics and a relaxed structure, Corneliani’s spring/summer 2026 Summer Solstice collection proposes a single wardrobe for men in transit
Devendra Banhart wears an overshirt and trousers made from silk and mohair
Corneliani's long-sleeved polo shirt is fashioned from Supima cotton and Mulberry silk
This spring, Italian luxury label Corneliani presents a collection designed for men whose work and personal lives increasingly overlap.
Titled Summer Solstice, it was introduced in Milan with a show centred on light, balance and movement – ideas intended to reflect a modern lifestyle lived across climates and time zones.
The brand describes its current customer as a “metropolitan nomad”, someone typified less by their location than their outlook. ‘He is not defined by a single destination or by a fixed reason for travelling,’ says Corneliani style director Stefano Gaudioso Tramonte. ‘In practical terms he may move for work or for pleasure, but more deeply his journey is an inner one. He lives in a world without borders – cultural, professional or emotional – and navigates it with curiosity and awareness. Travel, for him, is as much a state of mind as a physical act.’
His wardrobe, Tramonte adds, reflects that duality: ‘garments rooted in Corneliani’s tailoring tradition, yet open to innovation, designed to feel natural in constant motion – a balance between heritage and experimentation, between structure and nonchalance’.
In practical terms, that philosophy begins with fabric. Linen, tropical wool and ultralight Sea Island cotton are chosen not only for seasonal comfort but for durability and breathability.
‘For Corneliani, practicality and silhouette have never been a separate starting point – they evolve together,’ explains Tramonte. ‘Innovation, research, tradition and sartorial culture are inseparable elements of our design process.’
The aim is clothing that maintains its form without feeling rigid: knit polos, blouson shirts, lightweight leather outerwear and modular suits intended to be combined informally.
Colour inspiration comes from both natural and urban landscapes, with burnt browns, clay tones and beige offset by handsome dusty pink and muted yellow accents. Accessories follow the same balance of “finesse and function”, from minimalist lace-ups to hybrid penny loafers.

Pictured above: Corneliani light brown suede chore jacket
Music also shaped the collection’s identity. American singer-songwriter and visual artist Devendra Banhart – known for his compelling lyrical style, softly psychedelic folk sound and free-spirited aesthetic – performed at the Milan presentation and also appears in the campaign. He was selected for his ‘lived authenticity’, says Tramonte. ‘He brought something that goes far beyond presence or image – a freedom of expression that cannot be rehearsed or replicated by a traditional runway. Through him, tailoring becomes human and emotional: the clothes respond to who he is, rather than defining him.’
The result is a wardrobe positioned perfectly between business and leisure, built around light construction, breathable fabrics and silhouettes that adapt, all without sacrificing formality.