Stand Collar Bomber Jacket

Crafted from 54% cotton, 36% polyester, 10% spandex. A moderate weave with a regular silhouette — designed for permanence.Referencia: ARC-26-3669

Crafted from 54% cotton, 36% polyester, 10% spandex. A moderate weave with a regular silhouette — designed for permanence.

Item Number: RQ0016Gender: UnisexFabric: 54% cotton, 36% polyester, 10% spandexFabric Weight: 8.6 oz/yd² (290 g/m²)Fabric Thickness: ModerateCare Instructions: Machine wash at 30°C (gentle cycle); Do not bleach; Tumble dry low; Iron at low temperature, avoid ironing on print; Do not dry cleanFeatures: Basics, Casual, Street, Daily Casual, Outdoor, School, Office, Cotton Blend, Button, Zipper, Pocket, Long Sleeve, Drop Shoulder, Stand Collar, Regular, Loose, Summer, AutumnNotes: Minor batch differences can occur during blank garment production due to variations in fabric, dye and processing. This is common in apparel manufacturing, and we work hard to keep every item consistent.

Archival Record

Crafted for permanence, worn with intention. Stand Collar Bomber Jacket exists within the House as a permanent object — not seasonal, not disposable. Each garment is registered, documented, and preserved as part of TONER TORRENTINNI’s ongoing lineage, deeply rooted in the raw and silent beauty of nature's landscapes.

Registry
CollectionHOUSE_03 — INHERITANCE
Archive Ref.ARC-26-3669
StatusActive Archive
Registry DateMMXXVI
House Note
“A garment should not announce itself. It should remain — quiet, structural, permanent, like the landscapes that define our world.”
— TONER TORRENTINNI Research Archive
Specifications
Fabric54% cotton / 36% polyester / 10% spandex
Weight8.6 oz/yd² (290 g/m²)
FitRegular / Loose
FinishButton / Zipper / Pocket
ProductionLimited TONER TORRENTINNI production
CareMachine wash at 30°C (gentle cycle)
The House

TONER TORRENTINNI was not built for the moment. It was constructed for permanence — inspired by the eternal cycles of nature, for those who understand that true elegance is never loud, and that refinement requires no explanation.

Each garment belongs to a longer conversation between structure, the organic perfection of nature's landscapes, and the architecture of the body.

— House Notes, 2026