Tokyo’s restless energy meets rural tranquility in Onitsuka Tiger‘s Fall/Winter 2025 collection, where designer Andrea Pompilio reimagines urban duality through a cross-cultural lens. The lineup blends sharp tailoring, unexpected textures, and playful nods to ’90s icons to create a wardrobe built for the juxtapositions of metropolitan life.
Pompilio’s strength in menswear shines through cropped blazers paired with ankle-grazing trousers and shiny faux-leather peacoats with deliberately elongated sleeves. Shrunken grandfather cardigans and chunky knits layered over tweed Bermuda shorts redefine casual sophistication. Outerwear takes on a utilitarian edge with waxed field jackets, while bejeweled shirts add subtle Western flair. These pieces reflect Gen Z’s embrace of discordant elements – polished yet undone, structured yet relaxed.

The women’s lineup mirrors menswear staples with adjusted proportions: tailored parkas drape loosely over lingerie-inspired slip dresses, and polar fleece jackets deliberately collide with petticoat hemlines. Sartorial trousers and crisp button-downs anchor faux leather bombers, creating a tension between ruggedness and sophistication. While the gender-swap concept feels less seamless here, the collection succeeds in its deliberate awkwardness – a rejection of European fashion norms in favor of Tokyo’s rule-breaking spirit.
Crystal-embellished Mexico 66 sneakers and micro-houndstooth suits washed to shrink proportions highlight Pompilio’s obsession with subverted classics. Nordic-inspired embroidered sweaters and Western-style glitter embellishments on shirts nod to Tokyo’s role as a cultural mixer. Accessories lean toward practicality: belted boots with softened silhouettes and square-toe ballerinas in metallic finishes are paired with reissued bowling bags, originally designed for shoe storage but now reimagined as everyday staples.
“Urban duality thrives on intentional clashes,” notes Pompilio, referring to Tokyo’s coexistence of neon chaos and Zen minimalism. Coated jackets evoke the traditions of the British countryside, while oversized sleeves and mismatched fabrics reflect the kinetic rhythm of the city. Avoiding nostalgia, the collection channels the polished nonchalance of Lady Diana and the swagger of Michael Jackson through subtle detail rather than direct homage.
Pompilio proves that modern dressing isn’t about cohesion, but curiosity – a willingness to let opposing aesthetics collide. Onitsuka Tiger’s Fall/Winter 2025 range thrives on these tensions, offering wearable contradictions for cities where past and present, elegance and edge, constantly intersect.
©Photo: Onitsuka Tiger