Ferragamo Revives Its Archives With a Collector’s Tie Collection Inspired by Iconic Footwear
Ferragamo has always been a house that treats craftsmanship as both art and science. For Autumn/Winter 2025, the brand returns to its own archive to reinterpret some of its most visionary designs—not through shoes this time, but through ties.
The new collector’s edition of silk jacquard ties draws inspiration directly from Ferragamo’s footwear archive, specifically pieces designed between the 1930s and 1950s. These were decades when Salvatore Ferragamo was experimenting with structure, materials, and colour in ways that still feel avant-garde today. Now, those same design cues—interlaced straps, sculpted heels, layered constructions—are reimagined as woven patterns and textures across an exclusive series of ties.
It’s an unusual but quietly brilliant crossover: translating the tactility of leather and wood into fabric, while keeping the precision and inventiveness that defined Ferragamo’s early work. The result is a collection that bridges past and present, reinforcing the brand’s long-held reputation for turning functional design into wearable art.
Each tie feels like a coded message from the archive. The sculptural silhouette of a carved heel becomes a raised weave pattern. Painted contrasts from a vintage sandal evolve into sharp graphic prints. The multicoloured play of layered leather transforms into a bold, refined palette of silk. These reinterpretations feel as much about Ferragamo’s design legacy as they do about the way men dress today—less about showmanship, more about quiet, intelligent luxury.
Colour has always been a language for Ferragamo, and this collection continues that dialogue. The palette nods to the modernist energy of the early twentieth century—abstract geometries, subtle contrasts, and unexpected tonal combinations that make each piece distinct without being overstated.
What’s striking here is the idea of reinterpretation rather than replication. The ties aren’t nostalgic reproductions; they’re contemporary expressions of the same creative spirit that once defined Ferragamo’s early footwear. It’s an approach that speaks directly to the modern man—someone who values the story behind what he wears as much as the craftsmanship that shapes it.