Palm Angels and Hï Ibiza launch handmade tie-dye summer capsule
Palm Angels and Hï Ibiza turned club merch into a destination drop, sending 400 people to Flannels on Oxford Street for handmade tie-dye in orange and gray.

Palm Angels and Hï Ibiza have turned a club partnership into a real-world retail moment, and the draw was immediate. Outside Flannels’ Oxford Street flagship in London, 400 people lined up for the one-night-only launch of a capsule that also landed in Ibiza, where the island got first access at Hï Ibiza itself. The result is a tightly edited summer uniform made for hot-night dressing: five handmade tie-dye pieces in orange and gray, priced from 125 euros for a cap to 395 euros for a hoodie.
The new release, titled “Some People Just Know How To Fly,” is the second Palm Angels x Hï Ibiza capsule, following an earlier drop that launched on August 12, 2025. Hï Ibiza has framed the collaboration as part of its mission of “Connecting Cultures,” and this one pushes that idea further by tying the collection to two places that define the fantasy around it: London’s luxury shopping corridor and Ibiza’s nightlife capital. The club sits in Playa d’en Bossa, has been voted the world’s best club four times by DJ Mag, and draws crowds from 80 countries. That gives the capsule a ready-made audience that already understands the value of location as a style marker.
The clothes themselves stay close to the club’s pulse. Palm Angels says the collection includes tees, tank tops, hoodies and caps inspired by Ibiza nightlife, which is exactly why this works better as a lifestyle drop than as standard logo merchandise. Palm Angels, founded by Francesco Ragazzi, has long traded on the overlap between luxury streetwear, music culture and Italian craftsmanship, and Hï Ibiza is equally fluent in the language of spectacle, with immersive art installations and DJ residencies built into the club’s identity.

At the center of the capsule is Alberto Furlan’s custom “Cloud Wash” tie-dye technique, developed specifically for this project. The finish gives the pieces soft gradients rather than the hard-edged, souvenir-shop look tie-dye can sometimes fall into, and Furlan says no two pieces are alike. That handmade quality matters here because it makes every hoodie, cap and tee feel less like a mass-produced uniform and more like a wearable memory of a night out.
This is what destination retail looks like now: not just product, but place, not just fashion, but proof that you were there. Palm Angels and Hï Ibiza have made summer dressing feel like access.
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