Another Tomorrow Spring 2027: Materials Girl Is the Sustainable Fashion Moment We've Been Waiting For
In a fashion landscape increasingly crowded with brands making green promises they can't keep, Another Tomorrow has always done things differently. The New York-based label has built its reputation not on loud environmental messaging but on something far more persuasive: beautiful clothes that happen to be made the right way. With the Spring 2027 collection, cheekily titled Materials Girl, the brand doubles down on that philosophy — delivering a lineup of razor-sharp, sensually textured pieces that make sustainability feel less like a moral obligation and more like an aesthetic aspiration.
The result is a collection that rewards attention. Regenerative wool, Peace Silk, French lace, and Czech glass come together in a cohesive vision that is at once modern and quietly timeless — the kind of wardrobe you build slowly and wear for decades. But to reduce Materials Girl to a sustainability story alone would be to miss the point entirely. This is, first and foremost, a fashion collection. The ethics are the foundation, not the headline.
What "Materials Girl" Actually Means
The title is a knowing wink — a pop culture reference reframed to make a serious argument. In Another Tomorrow's world, being a "materials girl" isn't about materialism in the shallow sense. It's about material consciousness: understanding what your clothes are made of, where those materials come from, and what they cost the planet. It's a declaration that the most radical thing a luxury brand can do in 2027 is care deeply, publicly, and specifically about its supply chain.
This philosophy has always been central to Another Tomorrow's identity. Founded on the principle that fashion can and should be both beautiful and responsible, the brand has consistently invested in sourcing practices that most of the industry still treats as aspirational rather than operational. Spring 2027 is the most legible expression of that commitment yet — a collection where every fabric choice tells a story, and every story is worth telling.
The Fabrics: A Deep Dive Into the Materials That Matter
Regenerative Wool
Wool has always been a staple of considered dressing, but not all wool is created equal. Another Tomorrow sources regenerative wool, which goes beyond the standard "sustainable" label to actively support farming practices that restore soil health, sequester carbon, and improve biodiversity. Regenerative agriculture represents one of the most promising frontiers in fashion's effort to address its environmental footprint, and seeing it integrated so seamlessly into tailored, polished pieces is both exciting and instructive. The wool pieces in Materials Girl are sharp — structured blazers, refined trousers, precisely cut separates — with a weight and drape that signal quality immediately.
Peace Silk
Conventional silk production involves boiling silkworm cocoons alive, a process that troubles both animal welfare advocates and a growing number of conscious consumers. Peace Silk, also known as Ahimsa silk, allows the silkworm to complete its life cycle and emerge naturally before the cocoon is harvested. The resulting fabric is slightly more textured and organic-feeling than conventional silk, which, far from being a drawback, gives Another Tomorrow's pieces a living, breathing quality that synthetic alternatives simply cannot replicate. Draped blouses, fluid skirts, and delicate layering pieces in Peace Silk anchor the collection's softer, more feminine register.
French Lace
Lace carries centuries of craft heritage, and French lace in particular represents some of the finest textile artisanship in the world. By incorporating it into Spring 2027, Another Tomorrow taps into that legacy while keeping the collection grounded in the European tradition of slow, skilled making. The lace pieces feel special in the truest sense — not precious in a way that keeps them locked in a closet, but elevated in a way that makes getting dressed feel intentional. Whether layered over structured suiting or worn alone as a statement top, the lace elements introduce romance without sacrificing the collection's underlying sense of discipline.
Czech Glass
The inclusion of Czech glass as an embellishment material is perhaps the most unexpected and delightful choice in the collection. Bohemian glassmaking is one of the great decorative arts traditions of Central Europe, and the hand-crafted beads and embellishments produced in the Czech Republic carry with them an artisanal authenticity that mass-produced crystal simply cannot match. When applied to garments with Another Tomorrow's characteristic restraint — a scattering of beads at a collar, a delicate trim along a hem — the effect is quietly spectacular. It's the kind of detail that catches the light and the eye without ever becoming ostentatious.
Sustainability as Backstory, Not Branding
Perhaps the most sophisticated thing about Materials Girl is the way it refuses to let sustainability become the entire story. Too many brands in this space lean so heavily on their green credentials that the clothes themselves become secondary — accessories to the brand's moral positioning. Another Tomorrow inverts this dynamic. The collection is presented first as fashion: as beautiful, wearable, considered design. The sustainability bona fides are real, rigorous, and worth celebrating — but they function as context rather than content.
This is a crucial distinction. Consumers are increasingly skeptical of greenwashing, and rightly so. When a brand's primary message is "we are sustainable," it tends to raise more questions than it answers. When a brand's primary message is "here are extraordinary clothes made from extraordinary materials," and the sourcing story is simply part of the truth of those materials, the result feels both more credible and more compelling.
Who Is Another Tomorrow's Materials Girl?
She is not defined by a single aesthetic or lifestyle category. She might be a creative director in New York, a gallery owner in Paris, or an architect in Tokyo. What unites her is a particular kind of attention — to quality, to craft, to the way things are made and why it matters. She dresses with intention, building a wardrobe of pieces she understands and trusts. She is drawn to beauty that has integrity behind it, and she has little patience for the disposable.
In other words, she is exactly the consumer that Another Tomorrow has always been designing for — and with Spring 2027, the brand has given her its most confident and fully realized collection to date.
The Bigger Picture: What Spring 2027 Says About Fashion's Direction
Another Tomorrow's Materials Girl arrives at a moment when the fashion industry is under more scrutiny than ever. Regulatory pressure around textile waste and supply chain transparency is intensifying across Europe and North America. Consumer expectations around ethical production continue to rise. And the climate costs of fast fashion are becoming impossible to ignore. Against this backdrop, a collection built on regenerative wool, Peace Silk, French lace, and Czech glass reads as more than a seasonal offering — it reads as a roadmap.
Not every brand can or will follow Another Tomorrow's example. The sourcing relationships, certifications, and supply chain investments required are significant. But the collection demonstrates, persuasively and beautifully, that luxury and responsibility are not in opposition. They are, when done right, the same thing.
Spring 2027's Materials Girl is not just a great sustainable fashion collection. It is a great fashion collection, full stop — and that is the highest compliment Another Tomorrow could receive.

