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No Problemo and Le Specs unveil sculptural eyewear for workwear dressing

Five sculptural frames from FLUX to CYBORG push No Problemo’s alien utility look into sunglasses built for workwear.

Sofia Martinez··2 min read
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No Problemo and Le Specs unveil sculptural eyewear for workwear dressing
Source: hypebeast.com

No Problemo and Le Specs have turned eyewear into a sharper part of the uniform, with five sculptural frames that sit closer to gear than decoration. The second No Problemo x Le Specs installment, called Volume II, arrived on May 22, 2026 with a lineup that balances high-speed utility and an alien-leaning aesthetic.

The collection’s strongest move is its shape language. Across FLUX, IRIS, LYRA, VORTEX II and the returning CYBORG, aerodynamic silhouettes are reworked with sculptural 3D-moulding, precision cut-outs and sharply tapered temples. That makes the frames feel engineered rather than decorative, exactly the point Sofia Prantera said she wanted when she described the eyewear as a more surreal product, not just an accessory. In practical terms, the design is where this collaboration earns its place in a workwear wardrobe: the lines are assertive, but the frames still read clean enough to sit beside chore coats, overshirts and the kind of uniform dressing No Problemo already favors.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The branding is as direct as the silhouette. Each frame carries the No Problemo wordmark and the brand’s signature alien motif, which pushes the collaboration deeper into its offbeat universe without losing utility. Le Specs has framed the drop as a bold, streetwear-inspired line of unisex sunglasses with futuristic design and expressive, genderless style, a description that fits the collection’s mix of dark cherry, cobalt blue, bright red and tortoiseshell colorways. Those finishes matter because they give the range flexibility: tortoiseshell can soften the harder architecture, while the brighter reds and blues push the frames toward statement territory.

That tension is what makes the capsule work for everyday dressing. No Problemo positions itself around premium unisex workwear, graphic styles and contemporary streetwear staples, so the sunglasses do not feel like a bolt-on trend piece. They extend the same idea into the face, adding a controlled dose of sci-fi oddity to clothes built on repetition and function. Hamish Tame shares credit with Prantera on the concept, and the result is a collaboration that understands its lane: crisp enough for daily wear, strange enough to feel current, and structured enough to make workwear look intentional rather than merely practical.

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