Luxury

Tombolo marks Le Sirenuse’s 75th anniversary with Amalfi Coast resortwear

Tombolo’s fourth Le Sirenuse capsule turns a 75th-anniversary escape into wearable souvenirs, from a $78 bucket hat to $178 cabanas.

Natalie Brooks··2 min read
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Tombolo marks Le Sirenuse’s 75th anniversary with Amalfi Coast resortwear
Source: wwd.com

The smartest anniversary gift in Tombolo’s latest Le Sirenuse drop is not just a shirt or hat, it is the fantasy of packing for Positano. The brand’s fourth capsule with the Sersale family hotel marks Le Sirenuse’s 75th anniversary, a milestone that reaches back to 1951, when four siblings turned their family villa into an eight-room hotel on the Amalfi Coast.

That destination context matters because Le Sirenuse Mare opened April 23 in Marina di Cantone, also known as Nerano, about a 25-minute boat ride from Positano. The new beach club comes with an 180-cover restaurant, three bars and a new Emporio Sirenuse flagship store, which is exactly why these clothes read best as part of an anniversary-trip daydream, not as random resortwear detached from the place that inspired them.

The prices are not souvenir-shop cheap, and that is the point. Tombolo’s Le Sirenuse Bucket Hat is $78 in Pompeiian Red organic cotton terry cloth, the 75th Anniversary Terry Tee is $108, cabana pieces land at $178, shorts at $138 and swim trunks at $138. Compared with Emporio Sirenuse’s own resortwear, where related pieces run from €108 for shorts to €208 for a jacket, Tombolo sits in the same polished lane without pretending to be an impulse buy.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

This is also Tombolo’s longest-running collaboration, first launched in July 2021 and followed by Part II in July 2022, now expanded into what the brand calls a limited run of Italian souvenirs. For a milestone anniversary, that is the right kind of gift logic: something wearable if the trip is already booked, and still persuasive if the two of you are only beginning to build the case for one. Le Sirenuse remains family-run, with Antonio Sersale, Carla Sersale and their sons Aldo and Francesco still shaping the hotel’s next chapter from Positano to Nerano.

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