〜Riding with an Aloha State of Mind〜
(Top image) Courtesy of the official Pharrell Williams website.
Text_Mayumi Kamura
At the Louis Vuitton Spring–Summer 2027 Men’s Collection, presented on June 23, one item immediately caught my attention amid the luxurious runway transformed into an urban beachscape of waves and sand.
It was a road bike.
The bike was based on the Pinarello Dogma F, the flagship model from Pinarello. Wrapped in leather on the saddle and handlebars and finished with a gold-colored chain, the bike unmistakably carried the Louis Vuitton aesthetic. Seeing a model stride down the runway with a road bike slung over his shoulder made for a surprisingly striking image.
Founded in Italy in 1952, Pinarello is one of the most prestigious names in road cycling. Its flagship Dogma series has powered numerous overall victories at the Tour de France and remains a benchmark at the highest level of professional racing. Pinarello was also once part of the same LVMH group as Louis Vuitton.

Of course, collaborations between luxury fashion houses and bicycle brands are nothing new. Louis Vuitton itself released a bicycle co-developed with Maison Tamboite in 2021, while Fendi partnered with ABICI back in 2009.
Most of these collaborations, however, have centered on urban or lifestyle bicycles. Particularly after 2020, brands such as Gucci and Stella McCartney introduced bikes that reflected the realities of the pandemic era—practical for everyday transportation, albeit with unmistakably luxury price tags.
That is why this latest collection feels different. Rather than a city bike, Louis Vuitton chose a performance-oriented road bike as a symbol of the brand’s creative vision. That alone makes the decision particularly intriguing.
Even more interesting is the fact that the collection itself was not themed around cycling. Instead, it drew inspiration from Louis Vuitton’s coral restoration initiatives in French Polynesia. The overall aesthetic embraced surfer culture, with models carrying surfboards down the runway. Fittingly, the model carrying the road bike was also dressed in a wetsuit, making the bicycle’s appearance all the more unexpected.

It raises even more questions—why a road bike, of all things?
Part of the answer may lie in the fact that creative director and musician Pharrell Williams is well known as an avid cyclist. There have even been numerous sightings of him riding through Manhattan on his favored Brooklyn Machine Works bike.
It is also possible that the timing is a subtle nod toward the Tour de France 2026, which begins on July 4.
The menswear world has been gradually drifting closer to road cycling culture in recent years—something already hinted at during events such as Pitti Uomo last year. Perhaps this is another sign of that slow convergence.
Postscript
The Tour de France 2026 will take place from July 4 to July 28. Global Ride is, of course, primarily focused on fun rides—but this is one event even we can’t afford to miss.
For a rider’s-eye perspective on the race, see the route analysis by sports journalist Kazuyuki Yamaguchi:
https://globalride.jp/event/tdf2025_01_en/
https://globalride.jp/event/tdf2025_02_en/
Profile

Mayumi Kamura
I’m a Global Ride editor. My expertise lies in visual expressions like design, art, fashion, and more. The COVID-19 pandemic prompted me to focus on my physical and mental health. I started playing tennis and resumed taking contemporary dance lessons. Considering that bicycle-related accessories often boast high design quality, I have a feeling I might become a fan during this experience.
Post Date:2026.06.26