Noah and Barbour are back for Fall/Winter 2025, and this time the collaboration digs even deeper into the shared DNA of two coastlines shaped by rough weather and harder work. Instead of reinventing Barbour’s classics, Noah leans into them — filtering the brand’s most recognisable silhouettes through Scottish tweed, European wool, and American canvas to create pieces that feel both lived-in and strangely cinematic.
The palette is pure North Atlantic: earthy plaids, muted greens, and stone-toned tweeds that echo forests, fog, and cold shorelines. It’s a meeting point between New England’s outdoor culture and the long-standing outerwear traditions of Northeast England, a subtle reminder that both places dress for the same realities — rain, labor, and time.
The collection’s backbone lies in three hero jackets: a pressed-wool Red Wading coat with a sculptural rigidity; a Cotton Canvas Bedale that arrives already carrying the softness of wear; and the Lovat Tweed Wading jacket, cut from Cheviot fabric and steeped in countryside heritage.
Noah’s design team frames the project as a transoceanic conversation, noting:
“This collection emerged as a conversation between two places that have always dressed for the same realities: weather, work, and time… we wanted the garments to feel as though they belong anywhere along the North Atlantic, in any decade, as long as they are designed for hard, enduring wear.”
The collection drops December 11 in stores and online at Noah, offering a wardrobe where durability meets quiet romance.













