460: Credit Suisse
Plus JW's Dior, SSENSE's slight sitewide sale, and a touch of High Touch.
Find a list of only-here discounts up to 25% off in the Magasin Code Index.
I’m back from a week of Swiss excellence (they are very good at what they do), having checked out the new Hauser & Wirth inn, Chesa Marchetta, in Sils and later joining Highsnobiety a town over in St. Moritz.
Shopping-wise, I actually did pick up some reportable intel. The massif of ski towns is more known for its luxury drag—less interesting to me away from major cities where I’m seeking out terroir—however, I discovered the small Giovanoli empire, which included a La Garçonne-esque men’s and women’s shop dubbed “Moda,” a chic technical gear depot, “Sport,” and possibly a connection to a little pub across the street, Bar Cetto, with an outrageous view of the Alps before which to sip Italian wine and beer.
Giovanoli stocks a lot of my friend Lauren Frauenschuh’s family brand, Frauenschuh (she did knitwear for Dion Lee in New York before moving back to Austria to design the label…now it’s all brilliantly flattering slope uniforms with a few suede skirts and neoprene minis of questionable pragmatism in the mix). And I talked Nir into buying this unbelievable Ten C anorak whose Japanese knitted nylon/polyester micro-fiber was unlike anything previously known to my fingertips; like powdery silk satin to the touch! Menswear!


The Highsnob team hooked us up with some really thoughtful gifting (danke!) including a traditional leather belt from third-gen Appenzeller Gurt featuring studded suns and bovine charms. Khaite-coded, if you ran it through a time machine on a dairy farm. The galaxy-brain styling I loved seeing on some of the other guests was looped through techy ski pants.
The most expensive thing I tried on, at a security-heavy workshop hosted by the brand, was an Audemars Piguet Royal Oak Double Balance Wheel Openworked, “openworked” meaning you can see the mechanics of that fames Swiss precision in action directly by glancing at the dial. Am I selling myself as a watch person? It’s $103,000, so if I am, maybe not today.
With News Editor Maya Kotomori.
What’s new
Perhaps the most actionable news of the week, Alex Mill’s Spring Collection lands, bringing with it frictionless pieces like the newly launched, cleavage-y ballet flat. It’s toughen-up-able with the Painter Jacket or picks from the equally strong men’s section, which counts a linen work jacket, twill zip jacket, and pique polo shirt (check out that enlightened greige) as additions to my personal shopping list.
Jonathan Anderson’s first collection for Dior has officially landed in stores, and yes—somewhere along the way we’ve collectively dropped the “W.” when discussing John W. Anderson’s creative directorship feats. SS26 plays with Dior’s legacy without putting it behind a historically perverse museum glass: There’s a hero accessory in the book tote, “no Dietrich” tees and pastel denim pieces for the jeans-and-tee consumer, big flared chiffon dresses with matching satin shoes that lean into Dior ’50s legacy for fashion history buffs. The biggest addition to the brand’s grammar is the Dior Medallion, reworked as a roaming insignia across the entire collection (this Toledo calfskin belt is a favorite.).
Following Jonathan Anderson’s no-sleep-till-legend-status career path, his ongoing Uniqlo collaboration returns with an SS26 collection that’s as clear as ever, with a few well-placed jolts. Seasonal updates come through color: a sharp orange bi-color tee and milk-of-mint jorts that truly make the case for seafoam as a functional neutral. It’s a familiar formula for Anderson’s Uniqlo, just as clever as it is accessible, with just enough variation to keep it moving.
Incumbent all-natural-materials brand H-O-R-S-E is here to remind us that while gym class may be behind us, PE kit aesthetics are forever. Drop 003 leans into that thesis with high-neck sweatshirts and straight-leg sweats in navy and grey; uniform-adjacent, but elevated enough to wear far beyond any locker room. You can also still use MAGASIN20 for 20% off the whole site.
Six new spring sneakers enter rotation: Salomon’s Rier collab trims the usual trail bulk into something sleeker with the all white XA Pro 3D. By Far taps 1930s football lines with a barely-there bungee fastening on the Prudent sneaker (its first in the category). Jacquemus and Nike revisit the Moon shoe in a trio of Neapolitan tones (the Glossier-esque pink is our favorite, given the sneaker-y ballerina export). And there are two VEJA collabs, one with Magliano and one with Baserange made out of recycled nylon and organic French hemp. To round everything off, Prada’s new leather and mesh Speedrock brings city-meets-outdoors utility with just a dash of REI seasoning (see: the yellow-flecked cord laces on the graphite/black color way).
Cordera remains a sleeper, Toteme-tier (in terms of price and wearability) brand worth waking up to: consider their SS26 a formal introduction. This collection makes beige, brown, and every in-between shade feel intentional rather than institutional (a lot of the time khakis like this can lean a little UPS-y, and not in a good way). Standouts include a perfectly cropped ostrich leather bomber and cotton capris that show a mastery in flattering proportioning. Then there’s the Estructura mule, hiding its heel within the sole as a design detail.
The Gia Borghini x Pirrie Wright Opera Collection draws from stage costuming with a light touch: The Renata’s curled upper nods to 16th century period footwear, while the Callas slingback distills the theme into something more wearable and less historical literal. It’s theatrical, but not costume-y, landing somewhere between Broadway extra in a period drama and modern eveningwear.
Two jewelry drops, one shared instinct for statement pieces that feel collected rather than hoarded season-to-season: Sophie Buhai expands her Isadore earrings into carnelian and onyx, alongside scarab motifs (you guessed it…a brooch). And Jessica McCormack’s Orbit collection moves more toward the stratosphere, celestially—diamond spheres, asymmetry, and high-carat pieces that orbit (the material writes itself!) between playful and serious investment.
Launching today, Brooke Callahan joins silk specialist Home of Hai for a collection that merges her signature, cultishly LA silhouettes with elevated fabrication. Scrunchies, bags, and tie-front slip dresses arrive in rich silk, blurring the line between sleepwear and nightlife.
Once open produce starts appearing in net bags on the street, spring has officially arrived. From the Hereu Calella Filt cotton net carryall to the Rixo x Dragon Diffusion woven leather Niamh handbag, a vintage-feeling piece without the fragility of an actually vintage woven leather bag, to Loeffler Randall x Underwater Weaving basket bags with a Jane Birkin-tinged charm.
A busy week for fragrance. Phlur’s Honey Moon blends mandarin, honey, and vanilla into something warm but not heavy. LoveShackFancy’s Sweetheart leans fruity-floral with a sparkly feminine finish. Miu Miu’s Fleur de Lait introduces mango and coconut into its more powdery universe, while Santa Maria Novella expands into body care—adapting its Acqua (light, aquatic) and Quercia (heady, woodsy) into a body cream and bath gel.
There’s also: Tory Burch x The Explorers Club’s Women in Exploration capsule, complete with commemorative patches and 10% proceeds funding women in science—gear with an actual mission; Jil Sander x Oliver Peoples eyewear, delivering the slick, future-facing frames The Matrix (1999) promised us; Prada’s five-piece Re-Nylon SEA BEYOND capsule, reworking house codes in seasonal color shifts; Swedish Stockings x August Barron hosiery, which just dropped today with just enough attitude to make tights a focal point again; Etam x Miaou’s first lingerie outing, all sub-$50 and engineered for maximum visibility beyond the bedroom; AGOLDE x Maria McManus, loosening denim’s usual rigidity with pieces like a bandana worn as a sarong; St. Agni’s Fawn textile, ushering in a softer animal instinct to the fashion stampede of 2026; COS’s Monument Tote, a bag that means business and hints at the brand’s continued inching toward higher-stakes accessories offerings; and Alex Mill’s Perfect Little Tote edit, an array of its hero canvas carryalls—the Daily size is the 2004-era Celine Boogie bag, still practical enough for any canvas-appropriate day trip.
Men’s releases
Cawley’s second SS26 drop brings a lot of focus specifically to its menswear offerings, with a slightly offbeat sensibility. Overdyed cotton-linen trousers and a British oilskin rain mac anchor the collection, while the freakier striped typewriter pant gives ethical train conductor fantasy. I think Andre 3000 would order the entire thing, which, I mean, kind of confirms it as a great collection.
Jacques keeps things neat and no-fuss in this cogent spring edit. Fare centers on pieces that add something you might not know you need while not overcomplicating the existing wardrobe: cashmere wool bombers, merino mock necks, and tennis polos in both long and short sleeve lengths.
Home releases
Zara Home continues its strong run with Colin King’s debut collection. Brass plates add a polished accent to any room whether a catchall or display fruit tray, while lacquered nesting tables and plinth-like side pieces bring a more solid yet not too on-the-nose ’80s reference.
For those looking beyond trend cycles, though, Robert Stilin’s selection for his newly debuted online store—vintage grails that reach POA pricelines—offers deeper cuts. A 1973 Silas Seandel bench-table hybrid and a custom-updated steel and oat worktable channel mid-century rigor with a collector’s eye.
The second Nickey Kehoe and Dumais Made collaboration lands firmly in lighting heaven with claw-like sconces and ceramic lemon-framed mirrors thatdraw from Sicilian votive traditions.
Checks, plaids, and tartans are making a strong case in interiors in 2026. Tekla introduces its first core check in a cool blue percale, while BAINA echoes a similar water-like motif across two towels, one for poolside and another for the bathroom.
A touch of High Touch
NAD+ enters a more consumer-facing format (versus its usual in-clinic or on-demand IV drip) with pre-dosed injectable pens by NADClinic. The co-enzyme—central to cellular energy and function, and likely the biggest name recognition in buzzy longevity interventions—naturally declines with age, and this delivery system aims to replenish it directly.
Musely’s new estrogen patch introduces an FDA-approved bioidentical hormone delivered through the skin. Designed for women 40–60 (and a talk-to-your-doctor moment), it addresses menopause and perimenopause symptoms from low energy to skin thinness without relying on oral treatments, which often carry side effects.
What’s on sale
Maryam Nassir Zadeh, you will always be famous. The MNZ end-of-season markdowns have just landed, featuring 50% off all bags and an added range of shoes. Our favorites are the utility-minded Julian hobo or the wavy suede Tierra shoulder bag, and of course, the Serafina flat—all half price.
SSENSE rolls out up to 15% off new-season pieces—less clearance, more revenue strategy (post-bankruptcy closure stave-off looking good). Still, it’s a useful moment to pick up a couple odds and ends; my eyes are on seasonal colors like this orange Pleats Please modular scarf and these lime green fur Marni slip-ons without paying full freight.
Everything at Thistles is 20% off at checkout, including the Al frame—a Magasin gift guide pick (!) with a soft square shape that channels a very specific 1960s reference point: Think Kennedy. While it is women’s history month and we hate to see two baddies pitted against each other, Love Story discourse has brought us to this point of exhaustion: Jackie O > CBK.
Friends & Family season delivers at Saks, with mid-tier luxury seeing meaningful reductions. This Staud dress drops dramatically (from $450 to $168), and there’s also a lot of Alexis Bittar jewelry. On a hunt for the perfect wide-leg trousers I found Diane Keaton’s Margiela skater chinos; if you’re a size 0, they’re all yours (last pair).
An outdoorsy one: Arc’teryx’s outlet adds an extra 30% off, with outerwear dipping even lower depending on color. The less conventional shades (like this Sentinel jacket in a smoky teal color marked down from $750 to $450) often see the steepest cuts.
Bergdorf’s new season sale mixes practical buys with aspirational ones; Manolo slingbacks fall into a surprisingly accessible range after stacked discounts ($1,025 to $384 with an extra 25% off sale), while statement pieces like this 16Arlington number (down to $288 from $960) make a strong case for impulse decisions.
At Nordstrom’s spring savings event, appeal lies in range: Mango basics alongside Tory Burch footwear (the Kira flip flop in red is 20% off and the classic loafer is up to 30% off), all under one roof, all temporarily reduced. The coming weeks are sure to reveal even more gems.
Vince offers 25% off sitewide with FFSP26, including its campaign pieces—red flared cotton pants and sharp linen-blend blazers that nod to mid-century cinema (Rear Window, 1954) without feeling too literal.
Thank you, Nonna. The indie retailer’s sample sale pricing reaches near swap-meet levels in this edit, with pieces like Delfina Balda Yo-Ma pant marked down to $50 from $360 and even this one-season-ago doily-collar Sandy Liang cardigan marked down to $276 from $395.
There’s also: Madewell’s Insider Event, knocking 25% off nearly everything (and there’s an extra 40% off nearly everything if you sign up for their newsletter); luggage brand BÉIS travel’s virtual warehouse sale, stacked with greatest hits like the carry-on roller; Banana Republic’s Friends & Family event, a full spring reset (linen shirting included) before the first real 70-degree week exposes any laundry negligence; cou cou’s lingering spring cleaning sale, a rare entry point into their cotton voile and pointelle universe (I’d recommend starting with a couple pairs of briefs and a cami or two, then recalibrate expectations); and the Kiehl’s Friends & Family sale, 25% off across the board (30% if you commit to emails), with the Midnight Recovery serum stepping in as damage control for Northeast windburn season.
Home sales
In its final week, the 1stDibs annual spring sale expands with one last burst of collectible furniture and jewelry. Burl wood nightstands and a modestly priced amethyst and diamond ring are a couple highlights in my cart, from investment furniture pieces to smaller, more sparkly additions.
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