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Photo: Liam MacRae
Fashion loves inheritance when it can be styled into a clean image. But Denim Tears has always worked best when memory, politics and identity sit closer to the surface. For its Spring/Summer 2026 denim campaign, the label brings in Ms. Lauryn Hill and her children, turning the collection into something more than a celebrity-fronted rollout. It becomes a study in lineage: not as branding shorthand, but as presence, continuity and cultural weight.
The campaign is anchored by Lauryn Hill alongside Zion, Selah, Joshua, John, Sara and Micah, photographed by Liam MacRae in stark black-and-white imagery. That casting choice matters. Rather than relying on a random constellation of faces, Denim Tears builds the release around a family image that already carries its own history — musical, generational and symbolic.
That sense of closeness runs directly through the collection itself. Coverage of the release notes the return of the brand’s dedicated Denim Tears Denim program for SS26, combining familiar heavyweight and selvedge pieces with newer additions built around the label’s recurring Cotton Wreath motif, including a new Jacquard Cotton Wreath execution. Other reported pieces include a Trucker Jacket, Baggy jean, Bucket Hat, Denim Cap and Tote Bag, extending the wreath pattern across both garments and accessories.
What makes the project resonate is the refusal to separate clothes from ancestry. In a fashion landscape still obsessed with novelty, Denim Tears returns to something slower and more durable: the image of family as archive. Lauryn Hill’s presence alone carries decades of artistic and emotional charge, but placing her beside her children changes the temperature of the campaign. It no longer reads simply as iconography. It reads as continuation.
That is where Denim Tears remains sharper than many of its peers. The brand does not just sell garments; it repeatedly asks clothing to hold historical and diasporic meaning. Here, denim becomes less about American casualwear in the generic sense and more about inheritance — what is passed down, what is worn publicly, and what survives through relation. That reading is an inference from the campaign’s family-centered casting and the collection’s stated emphasis on lineage and closeness.
The visuals help. The black-and-white treatment strips away distraction and places the focus on posture, proximity and silhouette. It lends the campaign a slightly devotional feeling, as if the collection is being presented not through spectacle but through witness. Even the repeated wreath motif lands differently in that context: less decorative, more emblematic.
The release also had a clear commercial rollout. Multiple reports say the SS26 collection was scheduled to launch on April 17, 2026 at 11 a.m. ET through the brand’s website, with physical availability including African Diaspora Goods in New York and Denim Tears’ Atlanta residency at Lenox Square.







Photos: Liam MacRae
