10 Shirts, 10 Cities: The Architectural Inspired Travel Wardrobe
- WordsHanna Nilsson
- Date19/09/25
At OAS we often look at clothes the way we look at buildings. Pattern, structure and texture shape how a piece lives, just as they shape how a building feels. Our designers travel, research and sketch with architecture in mind, drawing inspiration from the lines, colours and materials of different cities.
This guide pairs ten of our men's shirts with ten destinations. Some I've walked through ourselves, others I believe resonate with the city. Each match shows how a shirt’s design reflects a place’s architectural character, from Niemeyer’s concrete curves in São Paulo to Barragán’s colours in Mexico City.
Vienna, Austria - Regalia Viscose Long Sleeve
Vienna’s Secessionist movement comes alive in the Regalia shirt. Golden-brown patterns recall Klimt’s mosaics and Otto Wagner’s clean yet ornate facades. Refined and decorative, never excessive. Made entirely of viscose, resulting in an airy, silky soft feel.
Jaipur, India - Mixset Rocco Shirt
Jaipur is called the Pink City, but its architecture is more than colour. The Mixset Rocco shirt, with its vertical patchwork of different patterns from spring/summer 2025, mirrors the repetition of arches and jali screens in Rajput palaces. In Jaipur, geometry is never sterile but alive with texture and ornament, and I believe the shirt reflects that vitality.
São Paulo, Brazil - Urbano Rocco Shirt
São Paulo is a city built in concrete, its skyline shaped by Brutalism and the restless hand of Oscar Niemeyer. The graphics reminds me of Niemeyer’s Copan buildings and the sprawling murals of street artists like Os Gêmeos, who turned the city into a living canvas. In São Paulo, architecture really absorbs politics and improvisation, making it dynamic, just like the Urbano shirt.
Mexico City, Mexico - Flower Shop Shirt
Mexico City is a collage of colour, scale, and history. The Flower Shop Shirt, with its graffiti-like motifs, channels the same abundance found in Luis Barragán’s modernist pastels and Diego Rivera’s monumental murals. In a city where pre-Hispanic ruins sit beside brutalist concrete and Art Deco facades, architecture becomes an act of storytelling.