From Runway to Roweam: New x True Vintage: How Roweam Bridges Ralph Lauren’s SS26 Vision

Ralph Laurens SS26 Collection

At Roweam, we know that style doesn’t stop at the closet… it seeps into the home! Fashion and interiors speak the same language of texture, silhouette, and mood, and when blended together, they create a lifestyle that feels raw, timeless and indulgent. That’s why we champion New and True Vintage pieces, treasures that carry the weight of history yet live perfectly in the present. Designed to be cherished, they are meant to be passed from one generation to the next, much like couture garments when lovingly preserved.

So when Ralph Lauren unveiled his Spring/Summer 2026 collection, we couldn’t help but play matchmaker. Picture it: these woman stepping off the runway… where do they go next? Straight into Roweam, of course, curating her world with the same elegance she wears on her sleeve.

This is where the fun begins! Our edit of who we think these Ralph Lauren muses would be if they shopped for interiors with us. From cabana-striped daydreams to low-lit glamour, each look tells it’s own original story and we’ve paired it with our favorite Roweam pieces that echo its fabrics, shapes, and spirit. Because as one may know, true luxury isn’t just worn, it’s lived in through experiences.

This season, Ralph Lauren’s Spring/Summer 2026 collection feels like it’s speaking directly to that dialogue. His pared-back elegance and blending of masculine and feminine codes resonate with the same spirit we bring to our Roweam pieces, proof that vintage isn’t just about looking back, but about shaping what’s next.

The collection unfolds in a palette of bold simplicity, crisp reds, inky blacks, and clean whites. It feels at once modern and timeless, pared back to its most striking essentials.

This season, he leaves behind last year’s romance of ruffles and velvet in favor of streamlined tailoring and confident lines. The result carries an ease that feels intentional, every detail placed with quiet precision rather than excess nonsense.

Roweam’s Founder Blair Moore, her story began in fashion, but its influence is woven through every corner of Roweam. At Parsons, her senior collection earned awards and the rare honor of being hand-selected by Anna Wintour (we are still in mourning to her stepping down as chief), a recognition that signaled her instinct for timeless design with modern relevance. Her early career brought her to Ralph Lauren, where she worked on shoe collections, refining her eye for materials, structure, and the subtle details that elevate a piece from beautiful to iconic.

“For me, interiors and fashion are the same conversation,” Blair says. “It’s about how materials move, how colors play against each other, how something can feel powerful but effortless at the same time. Roweam is my way of extending that dialogue from the runway into the home.”

- Blair Moore, Founder of Moore House Design & Roweam

That same philosophy lives in Roweam. Where fashion plays with fabrics, drape, and silhouette, Blair now translates those codes into her design through textures, forms, and finishes for the home. A sculptural chair might echo the strong tailoring of a tuxedo jacket; a delicate glass vessel might mirror the fluidity of a slip dress. Each piece is chosen not just for function, but for the persona it suggests, curating a home the way one might curate a wardrobe. Just as Ralph Lauren’s SS26 muses embody strength and softness, Roweam’s interiors echo that same spirit: timeless, refined, and always lived in with style.


The Nautical Muse: Rhode Island Refined

Stepping off her J-Class sailing yacht, silk scarf trailing in the breeze, docking at Bowen’s Wharf where polished wood gleams under the Rhode Island sun. It’s the kind of afternoon that drifts effortlessly into cocktails by the marina, and watching the match at the International Tennis Hall of Fame just down Bellevue Avenue. Sports are in her blood, whether gripping a racket or steering the helm, and her style mirrors that duality: crisp, tailored, a touch masculine but always softened with elegance.

Her Ralph Lauren SS26 look tells the story: black-and-white stripes layered under a deep v-neck vest, wide-brimmed hat casting shade with just the right drama. She is poised, refined, and undeniably nautical. But, if you followed her off the court and away from the docks, into the home she curates, you’d see her spirit woven through every detail. And at Roweam, we know exactly what she’d choose

Lorenzo Sofa – True Vintage
The leather-and-rope sofa is her anchor piece. Just as her boat is bound by rigging, this sofa’s woven rope detail nods to her life at sea. Upholstered in rich black leather, it mirrors the sharp lines of her runway look, while its mid-century form carries the same timeless prestige as the Tennis Hall of Fame. Strong, commanding, but softened by handwoven craft, this is her signature seat.

Designer Javor Pivka Chairs – True Vintage
These 1970s beech wood chairs, reupholstered in hickory leather and plaid linen, are as tailored as her tennis whites and as smart as her striped shirt. The contrast of materials, masculine wood, feminine fabric, mirrors her ability to move from the yacht deck to the grass court without missing a beat. She’d place them around a dining table, ready for friends after a regatta or a late-summer tennis match.

Abstract Harbor Scene – True Vintage
No coastal retreat is complete without art that echoes the sea. This ink drawing of layered rigging and sails feels like a snapshot of her world, energetic, graphic, forever in motion. Its monochrome palette is as crisp as her fashion uniform, while its bold lines capture the spirit of Newport Harbor itself.

Driftwood Floor Lamp – True Vintage
A sculptural piece of weathered driftwood, turned into light. It’s the conversation starter she loves, a piece of nature elevated to art. It carries the same easy elegance as her wide-brimmed hat, organic, dramatic, and impossible to ignore. With its warm patina, it brings a touch of the shoreline indoors, reminding her of twilight sails long after the sun sets.

Her Roweam home is a reflection of her passions: the precision of tennis, the freedom of sailing, the refinement of timeless design. Rope, leather, wood, ink, driftwood, these are her fabrics and finishes, as much as silk ties, striped shirting, and crisp tailoring. She curates her space as she curates her wardrobe: with intention, luxury, and a touch of sport.


The Riviera Hostess

She steps gracefully off her polished wooden boat, let’s call her “La Belle Étoile”, a vessel as timeless as the coast itself, onto the shimmering docks of the French Riviera. Here, in the golden light of late afternoon, she is not just a guest, but a hostess. The type who collects people, stories, and objects with the same discernment she brings to her wardrobe.

Her pleasures are cultivated: mornings at the Marché Forville, where she chooses fresh flowers with a woven basket in hand; afternoons stretched across a wicker chair, fanning herself with a treasure picked up in Seville; evenings reserved for champagne and oysters, poured into delicate stemware she has scoured brocantes to find. She is a collector, a curator, a woman of impeccable taste, her home is not simply decorated, but layered with narrative and memories.

The Maren Wicker Lounge Chairs – True Vintage
For someone who lives to lounge by the sea, these reclining wicker chairs are perfection. Their bentwood frames and cane weave mirror the breezy ease of Riviera living, while the rear wheels make them as practical as they are chic, easy to roll from sun-drenched terrace to shaded veranda.

Fish Scale Vase – True Vintage
She would spot this in an instant. Its textured ceramic surface, glazed in earthy greens, recalls the scales of a fish gliding beneath the Mediterranean waves. For her, it becomes the vessel for those freshly cut market flowers, wild peonies in spring, dahlias in autumn, always styled with effortless luxury.

Blush Pillow – New Vintage
“Not your grandma’s florals,” she would laugh. This pillow, in rusts and pastels, feels at once vintage and refreshingly modern. Tossed on her wicker lounge chair, it softens the scene, like the blush of rosé at golden hour. It’s understated, but undeniably chic, exactly her kind of detail.

Daisy Etched Coupes – True Vintage
Champagne tastes better in stemware that tells a story. These delicately etched daisy coupes are her secret weapon for hosting, playful, poetic, and distinctly hers. She collects glassware the way others collect art, and these are treasures she’ll reach for each time the champagne cork sings.

Her world is one of indulgence, taste, and ease, but never without refinement. The wicker, the etched glass, the textured ceramics, the soft blush accents, they weave together to create a Riviera tableau as rich as her own narrative. She curates her life the way she hosts: with generosity, glamour, and with impeccable vintage taste.

Because for her, the true luxury isn’t just found in the yacht she sails or the champagne she sips, it’s in the details she surrounds herself with, each piece carrying the weight of memory, story, and beauty.


The Monochrome Power Player

She arrives not quietly but unmistakably, sliding out of a vintage Mercedes-Benz 300SL Gullwing, silver doors lifting like wings. She is the woman everyone notices but no one can quite pin down: always present, never available, always in the know, yet somehow just out of reach.

Her uniform mirrors her lifestyle: crisp, monochromatic, tailored yet fluid. Today, it’s a bandeau paired with wide trousers and an oversized blazer, the kind of look that reads as both boardroom and beachfront. Accessories are never frivolous but iconic, a strand of pearls, a sculptural fragrance bottle in the shape of a shell, a camera always at her side (never her phone). She is the life of the party, yes, but also the one controlling the narrative.

And when it comes to interiors, her taste is just as decisive: clean silhouettes, silver accents, and timeless design with a whisper of glamour. At Roweam, her selections are sharp, elegant, and unapologetically luxe.

The Bromley Sofa – New Vintage
Like her wardrobe, the Bromley Sofa is about line, precision, and presence. Its angular arms and slipcovered silhouette balance Italian mid-century inspiration with English restraint, streamlined but undeniably stately. In crema fabric, it feels like the interior equivalent of her all-white look: crisp, fresh, and endlessly versatile.

Gorham Silver Cocktail Set – True Vintage
For her, entertaining is performance. The Gorham silver cocktail set is a statement of polish and power. Silver, sleek, hallmarked with history, it mirrors her love of precious metals and her reputation for being the one who always knows where the best martinis are poured.

German Glass Lamp, 1950s–60s – True Vintage
She prefers her light diffused, flattering, cinematic. This frosted glass lamp with silver-toned hardware glows with the same cool sophistication as her monochrome palette. It’s functional, yes, but also sculptural and feminine, an object that makes a statement even when switched off.

Her world is defined by soft silhouettes that cut sharp lines, by materials that gleam. Leather, silver, frosted glass, crisp linens, these are her fabrics as much as cotton shirting or pearl strands. She curates her interiors the way she curates her image: intentionally, impeccably, with no detail left to chance.

She may be hard to reach, but she is always around, seen in the flash of a camera, the glint of silver, the sweep of clean lines in a room or a runway.


The Equestrian Lady

She sits poised at the edge of the polo field, wide-brimmed beret tipped just so, her trench belted tight at the waist. Horses thunder across the green, champagne flutes clink in the background, and she remains unshaken: refined, sharp, forever chic.

Her world is one where equestrian tradition meets modern indulgence. She mounts her horse with the help of a 19th century French stool, not just for function, but as ritual, a reminder of heritage and history before the match begins. Her style is one of practical sophistication, tailored and suave, carried as easily into her interiors as it is onto the field.

Pavilion Chair – New Vintage
Much like her impeccable tailoring, the Pavilion Chair is sculpted, upright, and commanding. Its ochre velvet upholstery paired with bronze fringe recalls the grandeur of old-world European salons. It’s a seat fit for observation, a throne for the woman who watches the game, composed and in command.

19th c. Step Stool – True Vintage
This is her anchor. Handcrafted in France, this vintage stool is both symbolic and practical. She uses it to mount her horse, but in her home, it’s a talisman of her lifestyle: a bridge between sport and tradition, elegance and utility. Its weathered patina tells stories as timeless as her equestrian rituals.

Gunnar Nylund Bowl – True Vintage
Her interiors lean toward the refined and sculptural, which is why the black stoneware bowl by Gunnar Nylund is essential. Its matte glaze and modernist lines parallel the polish of her wardrobe, minimal, clean, quietly commanding. It is the accent piece that anchors her tabletop, just as her presence anchors the crowd.

Parker Vessel – True Vintage
With its earthy patina of moss, rust, and slate, the Parker Vessel feels pulled from the very ground her horses tread. It’s raw, textural, and storied, perfect for dried branches or left empty as an objet d’art. She loves it for its imperfections, its link to the elemental and the eternal.

Blue Double Cabinet – True Vintage
Every equestrian lady needs a place for her collections leather gloves, riding boots, fine linens. This faded blue cabinet, with its worn patina and paneled detailing, is the keeper of those essentials. It’s as functional as it is beautiful, a quiet nod to stable doors and tack rooms, reimagined for a life of luxury.

Her interiors are curated in lived traditions. Velvet and wood, stoneware and patina, they carry the same gravitas as the field she watches. She is classic, she is suave, she is equestrian elegance personified.

At Roweam, her world comes to life: furniture as timeless as a polo match, objects as enduring as the sport itself!


The Parisian Collector

In Paris, her days are a quiet choreography of beauty. She begins in the Left Bank galleries, lingering in front of canvases, mentally curating her own collection. Never in a rush, her pleasures are intentional, her choices thoughtful. A worn paperback of Balzac or Marguerite Duras rests in her tote, alongside a bouquet of tulips gathered from the morning market. On her way home, she pauses at the corner café for a single espresso, sipped slowly while the city hums around her.

Her evenings are intimate rituals. Curtains drawn, glass of wine in hand, she retreats into the glow of the screen. Always a classic, François Truffaut’s Jules et Jim (1962), Jean-Luc Godard’s Pierrot le Fou (1965), or Agnès Varda’s Cléo from 5 to 7 (1962). For her, these films are constant companions, mirroring her own romance with the city: modern yet timeless, familiar yet fresh each time.

Her interiors echo her rhythm, pieces gathered with discernment, each carrying weight, memory, and quiet refinement.

Paper Mâché Vessels – True Vintage
Lightweight, organic, and unpretentious, these vessels reflect her wabi-sabi sensibility. She places them on a windowsill filled with farmers market blooms, or leaves them bare, sculptural objects that feel as intentional as her life.

French Oak Counter – True Vintage
A masterpiece of carved detail and original hardware, this ornate counter becomes her anchor at home—sometimes a library console stacked with art books, other times a bar where she lays out wine and cheeses for friends. Like her, it balances history and reinvention with ease.

Bronze Bird – True Vintage
This sculptural figure, cast in solid bronze, speaks to her collector’s eye. Rare, symbolic, and poised, it feels less like décor and more like a treasure found in a tucked-away gallery—a piece that could live as comfortably in the Musée d’Orsay as in her apartment.

Framed Still Life with Tulips and Coffee – True Vintage
This moody painting could be a portrait of her very mornings: tulips in a vase, coffee cup by their side, shadows drawn across a checkered table. Its muted greens and ivories complement her own understated palette. It is not just a painting, but a reflection of her ritual, her intimacy with everyday beauty.

Every piece, every painting, every vessel is chosen with the same intention as the books she reads and the films she watches. She does not chase trends; she cultivates a world.

In her Paris apartment, the air carries the same romance as the films she loves: textured, thoughtful, and enduringly chic. With Roweam, her interiors become not a stage, but a living poem, curated with the grace of someone who knows that true luxury is not abundance, but depth.


What began on the runway ends in the home. Each woman from Ralph Lauren’s Spring/Summer 2026 collection embodies a lifestyle, one that Roweam translates into interiors through New and True Vintage treasures. From the salt air of Newport to the romance of Paris, these muses show us that style is never confined to what we wear; it flows through how we live, what we collect, and the spaces we create.

At Roweam, we believe that true luxury is timeless. It’s the rope detail on a mid-century sofa that recalls the rigging of a yacht, the patina of a vessel that feels as storied as an heirloom, the sculpted silhouette of a chair that mirrors a tailored jacket. Like couture, these pieces are meant to be cherished, passed on, and lived with, elegance not just worn, but experienced.

Because in the end, style is not just seen… it’s lived in every experience.