Fear of God has never been particularly interested in seasons, and The Eternal Order makes that position official. Jerry Lorenzo’s latest designs arrive as a formal declaration, a codified system of dressing wrapped in double-face wool and belted shut at the waist.
The collection’s own framing calls it a covenant. The silhouette is massive and unwavering: dropped shoulders, full-length coats, trousers with enough volume to qualify as architecture, the body reduced to a soft suggestion beneath.
Where Lorenzo keeps the whole thing from collapsing is the belt, a narrow leather strap or a wide fabric wrap cinched at the waist that transforms a cathedral’s worth of wool into something a man actually wears.
The palette moves from deep black and graphite through khaki and stone, with a full pale yellow denim moment that delivers genuine surprise because everything before it is so dark. The bags are enormous, the gloves are serious, and the baseball caps worn over the most dressed-up looks are the one reminder that FOG never quite lets go of where it came from.
The Eternal Order is Fear of God at its most severe, and for the man who has decided what he believes about clothes, that is exactly the point.
Fear of God The Eternal Order









































