TWP leans into texture, layering and utility for resort 2027
TWP made resort 2027 look like a wardrobe system, not a novelty act, with paper leather anoraks, cashmere, and shirtdresses built to split, untie and reset.

TWP’s resort 2027 collection looked built for women who want polish without the fuss, and that is exactly the point. Trish Wescoat Pound kept pushing the label deeper into texture, layering and utility, turning the collection into a study in clothes that can be mixed, broken apart and worn again without losing their sharpness.
The strongest pieces were the ones that did more than one job. There were form-fitting double-layered viscose blend tops, chunky Italian cashmere sweaters, striped knit and woven tops, and red paper-leather anoraks that brought a little bite to the lineup. The shirtdresses were the smartest move of all: striped styles that could be untied and worn as a skirt and shirt, which made the whole collection feel less like a fixed lookbook and more like a modular wardrobe. Even the travel bags came with button-off laptop cases, a small but telling detail for a brand that keeps talking about ease without ever looking sloppy.
That balance has become TWP’s lane. Wescoat Pound founded the label in 2021 to bring her own take on American sportswear to life, with ease, comfort and sophistication filtered through a utilitarian Midwest sensibility and a metropolitan New York point of view. The brand has been saying the same thing for a while, only now it sounds more fully realized: these are clothes designed to be versatile and re-imagined between situation and location. In a crowded contemporary market, that kind of discipline matters more than novelty chasing. The brands that last are the ones that give customers a way to dress, not just a reason to buy.
TWP’s business is following that logic. The label has found its footing in shirting, suiting and denim layers, and its fabric story is increasingly specific, with specialty paper leather, coated viscose linen and cotton shirting sitting at the center. The collection also sat alongside additional seasonal deliveries in the showroom, including an Aspen assortment built around eveningwear separates, which widened the range without diluting the core idea. That kind of segmentation is smart branding: one language, several registers.
The label’s commercial rise only sharpens the picture. TWP has 150 stockists in North America, three stand-alone stores in New York, Los Angeles and the Hamptons, and a first outpost outside the U.S. at Selfridges in London. At retail, the assortment runs from about $195 for jersey tops to $3,195 for leather skirts, a spread that keeps entry points open while protecting the premium image. Add in Jillian Wescoat Pound, who works as styling director and oversees visuals, and the brand starts to look less like a fashion project and more like a family-run system with a very clear point of view. In a market full of loud statements, TWP is winning by making the wardrobe smarter.
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