Issue link: https://www.balharbourdigital.com/i/1543791
"Guys want color," says Todd Snyder, "but they want it in a way they can live with. Military olive anchored beside charcoal and slate navy, then lifted with soft melon, dusty yellow, muted blues [shown on the S/S 26 runway, below]. These illustrations are a really good representation of who we are. They were done by a friend of mine, Richard Haines." he's always thought about design: Take something rugged, take something refined, and make the seam disappear. Luxe utility, he calls it. Not a contradiction, but a balance. Not loud luxury, but lived-in luxury. The kind that looks better the more you touch it. It's that rare blend of practicality and polish that also defines his clothing: cargo pants cut in suiting fabric, sueded linen in a tuxedo, tailoring that feels comfortable rather than precious. That spirit carries directly into his Spring/Summer 2026 collection, titled "La Buena Vida"—literally, the good life. Inspired by tailoring in the tropics, back when leisure was an art form, the collection captures a languid, sun-warmed elegance: Ricky jackets in sueded linen, silk suits paired with shorts, high-waisted Hollywood trousers, and field jackets worn cinched at the waist. Suit silhouettes remain relaxed, with a dropped button stance that creates a long, quietly sexy line reminiscent of late-1980s Italian tailoring. Prints add a spark of play in lounge shirts dotted with oversized Flamenco polka dots and awning stripes that echo vintage beach umbrellas, while footwear and accessories suggest a kind of studied nonchalance in fisherman sandals, soft loafers, and John Hardy jewelry worn as souvenirs from the trip. For Snyder, design has always been about building a world around you. His stores are as carefully curated as his wardrobes. Chairs and sofas are chosen like accessories: Some pieces are found, some made, all meant to signal a life you can step into. The goal, he says, is that feeling of walking in and thinking: I want to live here. I want to be part of this. It's the same impulse that led a boy from Iowa obsessed with suits and the romance of menswear to become one of the defining voices of modern American style. He grew up in a household shaped by an engineer father and an artist mother who encouraged him toward art. He flirted with engineering, then architecture, discovering that drafting could make him lose track of time in the best way. That blend of precision and imagination still defines him. It's why he can talk about interiors, lighting, and store atmosphere with the same fluency he brings to a lapel or a stitch. Or designing a Defender, because Snyder never stops at the object itself, he starts imagining the halo around it. Not content with the truck alone, he talks of creating a miniature toy version, a suede jacket keyed to each colorway, driving gloves, even a scent detail. And a Spotify playlist, curated like a secret soundtrack for the person who climbs in and turns the key. In that way, the Defender becomes what Snyder calls a mascot, in the emblematic sense. The truck is what his clothing has always been: luxurious without pretense. That's Snyder, too. A designer who still thinks like a draftsman, curates like a host, and builds worlds the way his parents taught him, with structure and with art. I M AG E S C O U R T E S Y TO D D S N Y D E R ; I L LU S T R AT I O N S BY R I C H A R D H A I N E S " To understand our brand, the store's environment is almost as important as the clothes, like that vintage cane sofa." — TODD SN YDER BALHAR B O U RSH O P S .CO M

