There are certain American dynasties that fashion simply refuses to leave alone, and the Kennedys sit firmly at the top of the pile.
Every few years, the culture machine dusts them off and presents them back to us as shorthand for a particular kind of aspirational living. Earlier this year, Ryan Murphy’s Love Story revived the romance – and mythology – of John F Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy, and now, another unlikely player has entered the conversation: Tod’s.
It’s Marlin project – a summer collection for both men and women – draws inspiration from the boat once owned by John F Kennedy (and later acquired by the Italian brand’s owner Diego Della Valle in 1998). It was designed by naval architect Walter McInnis, and was a mode of transport that became integral to JFK’s life (he apparently took presidential meetings with his cabinet from it while sailing with his wife, First Lady Jackie). Tod’s collection arrives just as fashion has rediscovered its appetite for the elegance the Kennedy family came to represent.
See also: 8 Rollnecks That Capture Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy’s New York Elegance

That understated sensibility runs through the entire collection, which leans into a very particular vision of leisure that combines New England with Italy. It’s very much a Hyannis Port over Monaco, sailing clubs over superyachts kind of energy. Its palette – creams and maritime greens lifted directly from the original vessel – are colors designed to age gracefully rather than chase trend cycles.

And unlike many brands currently strip-mining heritage for content, the Tod’s ready-to-wear line shows admirable restraint. There are, pleasingly, no obvious archival gimmicks in sight. The standout Marlin Bomber, for example, comes in technical cotton trimmed with nappa leather, with a sailor’s knot subtly attached to the zipper. The updated Marlin loafer – an evolution of the house’s signature Gommino – carries enough nautical coding to evoke a boat deck without veering into costume.

Nautical dressing is one of fashion’s few permanent genres, but what makes the collection feel especially timely is the industry’s broader return to understatement. The renewed obsession with Bessette-Kennedy – whose effortless wardrobe still circulates online today – speaks to a growing appetite for clothes that communicate taste rather than trend.
The irony, of course, is that ‘effortless’ style is usually the result of immense effort, good tailoring, and considerable money. But the Kennedy myth has always relied on hiding the machinery. And few collections currently package that illusion better than Marlin.




