Sarda unveils second Tomorrowland capsule, expanding into festival ready lifestyle wear
Sarda’s second Tomorrowland capsule pushes the lingerie house into festival dressing with pieces made to move from day to night, and from stage to afterparty.

Sarda is using Tomorrowland to stretch itself far beyond lingerie and swimwear. Its second capsule with the Belgian festival brand landed on Wednesday, May 13, 2026, and it reads less like a one-off collaboration than a clear bid to become a lifestyle label with a sharper fashion edge.
That ambition makes sense for a house with roots. Sarda was founded in Barcelona around 1962 by Andrés Sardá, has been owned by Van de Velde since 2008, and remains under the creative direction of Nuria Sardá, the founder’s daughter. The brand’s evolution now has a clean arc: from lingerie, to swimwear, and now to pieces pitched for a more expansive wardrobe that can survive outside the beach club and beyond the festival fence.

The brand and Tomorrowland are framing the capsule around freedom, empowerment and magnetism, but the more useful read is practical. This is festival wear designed to work hard: day to night, stage to afterparty, with enough polish to sit inside a compact summer closet rather than disappear into a costume box after one weekend. Sarda has also sharpened its target, aiming at a younger, primarily millennial premium customer, which places the capsule in a crowded field where the best festival dressing now has to earn repeat wear.
That is where the collaboration gets interesting. The first Tomorrowland x Sarda capsule launched on April 4, 2025, and was sold through the two brands’ websites and selected lingerie retailers, with one exclusive statement piece reserved for the Sarda store in Ibiza. The distribution tells you plenty about the brand’s playbook: premium, controlled, and pointed at a buyer who wants discovery without losing exclusivity.

Tomorrowland gives the partnership additional credibility on the product side. Its apparel platform says its official clothing and accessories are designed in-house with carefully selected fabrics and attention to detail, a promise that matters if Sarda wants this capsule to feel like more than decorative crossover dressing. The smartest version of festival style right now is modular, easy to layer, and convincing once the music stops. Sarda’s latest move suggests it understands that the real prize is not a single event look, but a wardrobe that can keep working long after the lights come up.
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