By 2025, OILL had moved beyond individual pieces.
The focus shifted toward complete-look garments designed not only to stand alone but also to exist together. Colors, textures, and silhouettes began to interact. Each release felt less like a drop and more like a scene within the brand's growing universe.
The year began with the release of our first waffle thermal sweater.
The piece arrived in a deep grape colorway, combining the textured structure of waffle knit with a knitted jersey construction. Alongside our first knitted jersey.
The result sat somewhere between sports heritage and modern knitwear, familiar yet reinterpreted through the OILL lens.
Later in the year, OILL presented its first full look.
At the center was a one-of-a-kind dark-printed camo denim, designed as a statement piece with a layered, irregular camouflage pattern. The look was completed with our Made in Italy leather belt, now introduced in a dark ocean blue colorway with a monogram embossing.
Alongside it came a new version of the waffle thermal, this time in a washed ocean blue colorway, carrying the same structure but a softer, more worn-in tone.
After that, OILL moved into its first full summer look.
The outfit balanced lightness with strong texture. At its base was an oil-washed T-shirt, paired with a forest green flannel shirt featuring a self-developed pattern.
The look continued with our first green-washed jean shorts, introducing a new seasonal silhouette. Completing the outfit was the monogram leather belt, reimagined once again, this time in a bright orange colorway that added a sharp contrast to the earthy palette.
The year concluded with our fall–winter look, one of the most developed releases we had produced.
At the center were the bulky cargo pants, a piece that had been sampled and refined for over a year before reaching its final form. The silhouette carried weight and volume, looking like a strong foundation.
Alongside them came our first zip hoodie, treated with a unique vintage wash that gave the garment depth and character from the very first wear.
To complete the release, we introduced three new merino wool beanies. While the pattern remained connected to earlier beanies, the new versions featured improved materials, an updated fit, and three entirely new colorways.
Looking back, 2025 was the year OILL became more complete.
Individual pieces still mattered, but the focus had shifted toward how everything connects. Textures, colors, and silhouettes began forming full visual statements, not just garments, but outfits with intention.
The world of OILL felt larger than ever. ox