House of Errors Step Outside With Lauterbrun

House of Errors aren’t easing into 2026. They’re moving with intent. Their second capsule of the year, Lauterbrun, is a quiet pivot away from city noise and into something looser, greener, and more reflective—without losing the brand’s sharp-eyed approach to menswear.

At its core, Lauterbrun is about everyday opulence, but not the obvious kind. This isn’t luxury as spectacle. It’s luxury found in movement, downtime, and shared moments. The collection leans into the idea that what you wear should feel lived-in, considered, and personal—especially when you’re not trying too hard.

The silhouettes are familiar but handled with purpose. Knitwear leads the charge, anchored by a knitted polo that features a cycling motif—two figures cutting through rolling hills. It’s graphic without being loud, narrative without slipping into novelty. That same visual language runs through a matching T-shirt, keeping things versatile and easy to wear.

Elsewhere, embroidery and illustration come together on a long-sleeve polo and a green jacket, both depicting a couple resting on grass. The mood is calm, grounded, and intentionally unhurried—pieces that feel as suited to a slow weekend as they do layered back into everyday rotation.

Trousers play a bigger role than usual. Alongside clean green and brown monochrome options, House of Errors introduce more expressive designs: pants animated with kites in flight, birds overhead, and a final statement pair that nods to alpine movement and powdered snow. They’re directional without tipping into costume—wearable statements that still sit comfortably within a modern wardrobe.

Lauterbrun doesn’t shout about escapism. It suggests it. A capsule built around texture, narrative, and the quiet confidence of clothes designed to be worn, not staged. House of Errors continue to refine their universe—this time with grass underfoot and space to breathe.

Tajinder Hayer