
- Courtesy Milli Point Two.
Milli Point Two’s Tundra Bop Part 1 reads like a post-apocalyptic fairytale wrapped in 3D seams and cashmere swagger. Found in the middle of a metaphorical whiteout, this collection is less “cozy core” and more survivor-core with taste—the kind of gear that looks like it’s been through hell but came back with better tailoring and a film deal.
From the jump, you know this isn’t just another seasonal rollout. It’s a statement drop—raw with emotion, layered in LA-coded mythos, and laced with references only the chosen will clock. Think 90s VHS oddities meet Baltic windbreaks and street-kid theatricality. It’s for the lovers, the loafers, and the lowlifes who’ve finally earned their moment in the light.
- Courtesy Milli Point Two.
- Courtesy Milli Point Two.
- Courtesy Milli Point Two.
- Courtesy Milli Point Two.
The Glace-Racer Down Jacket is a fat little puffball with military roots and a cropped cut that gives it that “I don’t need to try” attitude. Pair it with the matching Coone Vest for layered chaos or let it ride solo for a blunt silhouette that punches above its weight.
Knitwear got a glow-up too. The Pen Pusher/ Pen Pacer wool combo is equal parts old-money writer and new-money weird uncle—oversized, loud, but still clocking that loungey silhouette every real head chases come fall. Add the Preux/Aplombist leisure set, cut from a cotton/silk blend so soft it might actually be illegal, and you’ve got luxury disguised as chillwear.
- Courtesy Milli Point Two.
- Courtesy Milli Point Two.
Milli’s signature “1.2” updates hit like an upgrade pack for your wardrobe: sharper tailoring, more refined drapes, and materials that don’t just move—they perform. Think Italian cashmere power coats, leather that’s been reworked with a scientist’s obsession, and trousers that don’t just walk—they stomp.
The color story pulls from Croatia’s OG “Samoborka” factory palette—taupe, burgundy, deep black, and cream—aka tones that look like they belong in a brutalist film still but also slap on the sidewalk. It’s understated flex, not overplayed flash.
- Courtesy Milli Point Two.
- Courtesy Milli Point Two.
Directed by David Herrera and lensed by Adam Feuerman, the campaign doesn’t just show clothes—it gives you cinema. Set across scenes featuring characters like The Karaoke Godfather, The Lovers, and The Cowboy, the visuals play like an arthouse fever dream of downtown LA by way of Baltic grit. It’s got that antihero drip—every model looks like they’ve got a backstory, a secret, and a playlist full of unreleased B-sides.
- Courtesy Milli Point Two.