— The Colorway Edit · Dark anchor
The Olive Edit
Olive is the capsule's forest note — a muted, warm-grey green closer to moss than to the bright kelly green of activewear. It's desaturated on purpose: full-saturation green reads costume-y in clothing, so Olive is pulled back until it functions the way navy does in a traditional wardrobe — dark enough to anchor an outfit, warm enough to sit next to every other tone in the system without a fight.
The undertone leans warm rather than true green, which is the detail that keeps it inside the earth-tone family alongside Clay and Stone rather than reading as a standalone "color" piece. Worn alone, Olive looks outdoorsy in the quiet-luxury sense — closer to a well-worn field jacket than to technical gear. Worn under something lighter, it grounds the whole outfit the way a dark wood floor grounds a bright room.
It's the colorway to wear when the rest of an outfit needs a fixed point — under the Overshirt, beneath the Coach jacket, or as the Crewneck holding down a look built mostly from Ecru and Stone. Best in cooler months, though it wears year-round for anyone who runs warm.
— Available in Olive · 13
— 3 Ways to Wear Olive
Weekend Anchor
- Olive Hoodie
- Ecru Tee, worn under
- Raw selvedge Denim
Ecru underneath keeps Olive from reading purely utilitarian — it's the flash of light that makes the green look intentional.
Studio to Street
- Olive Cargo
- Sand Long-sleeve
- Ecru Cap
Sand is cool enough against Olive to stop the outfit reading head-to-toe military.
Layered Fall Day
- Olive Overshirt
- Stone Sweats
- Ecru Beanie
Stone lightens the bottom half so Olive can carry the outfit without weighing it down.
— FAQ
What colors go with olive green clothing?
Olive pairs best with warm neutrals — ecru, sand, and stone — plus raw indigo denim. Avoid cool greys and true black, which flatten olive's warmth; ink (a warm near-black) works because it shares the same undertone.
Is olive a versatile color to wear?
Yes — olive functions as a neutral in earth-tone dressing the way navy does in classic menswear. It's dark enough to anchor a look but warm enough not to read as formal or corporate.
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