Some garments do not age; they settle into history. The peacoat is one of them — naval in origin, metropolitan by adoption, defined by proportion and purpose.
In the “Maranello” edition, Vinile and Sealup treat this icon as material to be remastered. The Milanese outerwear house, founded in 1935, lends its nautical discipline and tailoring precision. Vinile, born in Maranello and guided by a philosophy drawn from musical remastering, brings a culture of reinterpretation already applied to design icons beyond the wardrobe.
Developed from Sealup’s Amalfi model and renamed for the occasion, the coat preserves its three-quarter architecture while introducing a quiet second voice: horn buttons, an ice-white sleeve label stitched in red, an ice twill lining traced with satin piping, and subtle co-branded detailing within. The cloth — wool and cashmere, water-repellent, Thermore-insulated — maintains the coat’s original function: protection with composure.
What results is not a revision, but a precise act of continuity. A study in Italian craft expressed through two distinct yet compatible languages.
Twenty pieces. For those who understand that icons are not changed — they are touched, carefully.