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The brand’s Material Science series turns NYLON METAL-TC into a study of light, colour, and technical obsession
Stone Island has always treated fabric like a living problem. Not just something to cut, sew, and wear, but something to test, mutate, dye, stress, and push until it starts behaving differently.
For the third episode of its audiovisual series Material Science, the brand returns to one of its most recognisable textile experiments: NYLON METAL-TC. First introduced in the Spring/Summer 2005 collection, the material has become a kind of Stone Island signature — instantly technical, slightly alien, and built around the way light moves across the surface.
Its metallic look is not created with metal. Instead, it comes from the construction of the yarn itself. The fabric uses black and white nylon threads with a trilobal structure, designed to refract light and create a shifting, iridescent effect. When dyed, only the white yarn fully absorbs the colour, leaving the darker threads to create depth, contrast, and movement across the garment.
The TC stands for Tinto Capo, Stone Island’s garment-dyeing process, where a piece is dyed after it has already been made. In the case of NYLON METAL-TC, that method intensifies the material’s strange visual behaviour. Colour doesn’t sit flatly on the garment. It changes depending on light, angle, and surface, giving each piece a slightly different atmosphere.
That is what makes the fabric feel so central to Stone Island’s identity. Since the brand was founded in 1982, its language has been built around the mantra Research, Form, Function. NYLON METAL-TC is almost a perfect expression of that idea: technical enough to feel engineered, wearable enough to become uniform, and visually distinctive enough to remain recognisable without needing to shout.
Over the years, the material has kept evolving. Stone Island has pushed it through coloured wefts, water-resistant treatments, micro ripstop constructions, resin finishes, 3D surface effects, and later versions made with ECONYL®recycled nylon. Each variation feels less like a replacement than another experiment in how far one textile idea can be stretched.
For SS26, that story continues with NYLON METAL-TC IN ECONYL®, used across different weights and garment structures. The collection translates the fabric into down jackets, field jackets with patch pockets, matching cargo trousers, short-sleeved shirts, and coordinated shorts — functional pieces that carry the material’s reflective, shifting quality into a wider wardrobe.
What makes Stone Island’s approach compelling is that it never treats innovation as decoration. The science is visible, but it does not feel sterile. The garments still carry mood, texture, and attitude. They look like clothes made for weather, movement, city life, and obsession.







