Entire Studios and adidas unveil all-black activewear capsule, focused on volume and silhouette
Entire Studios and adidas returned with an all-black capsule of training pieces and footwear, turning logo-free restraint into a modular uniform.

Entire Studios and adidas have made the smarter play in sportswear: strip everything back, then let proportion do the talking. The second chapter of their collaboration arrived as an all-black activewear capsule built around volume, silhouette and modular dressing, a collection that feels less like a one-off drop than a repeatable uniform. It is a sharp move in a market still crowded with loud graphics and louder color, and the first tell is practical as much as aesthetic: some of the pieces were already sold out on adidas’ product page.
The partnership has moved quickly. adidas and Entire Studios announced their first collaboration on Jan. 29, 2026, as a 26-piece range that launched worldwide on Feb. 5, 2026. That debut used adidas Optimé, ADIDAS Z.N.E. and adidas D4T as its base lines, then pushed them through Entire Studios’ lens with reworked Lightblaze POD and ACE footwear silhouettes. adidas framed the project as rooted in Los Angeles’ culture of movement and built for “day-to-night movement,” which is exactly where the label’s appeal has lived: in pieces that can move from training to street without changing identity.
Entire Studios, founded in 2020 by Dylan Richards Diaz and Sebastian Hunt, has always sold a version of luxury that refuses to feel exclusionary. The brand says it remains “accessible” and welcomes wearers of any age, gender or body type, and this adidas follow-up reads like a cleaner expression of that idea. By removing the maroon accent from the first release and keeping the palette fully black, the new drop sharpens the focus on cut, layering and fit. The result is less about fashion noise and more about a system, with each piece designed to work in combination.

The adidas lineup spans Lightblaze POD shoes, Z.N.E. pants, D4T training tanks, Optime bras and leggings, a Training Onesie, a Gym Bag and a cap. That mix matters because it shows where the collaboration is headed: not toward statement dressing, but toward a wardrobe built in modules, where the same black base can carry gym sessions, travel and off-duty dressing. In a season full of hype-driven collaborations, Entire Studios and adidas are arguing for something more durable, and the sold-out tags suggest that restraint still has a strong commercial pulse.
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