For Spring/Summer 2027, Charles Jeffrey once again blurs the boundaries between fashion, performance art, music, and storytelling. Titled AEOLIAN AFTERNOON, the latest chapter from Charles Jeffrey LOVERBOY unfolds as a surreal daytime television fever dream, where creativity wrestles with consumer culture and handmade expression pushes back against the numbing effects of digital life.
Named after the Aeolian minor scale, the collection is deeply connected to music, a recurring pillar of the LOVERBOY universe. Accompanying the collection is a new single produced by Tom Furse and Robert Fox, creating an immersive soundtrack that echoes throughout the project’s visual narrative. Drawing inspiration from the hypnotic compositions of Terry Riley and the ambient hum of endless television broadcasts, the atmosphere feels nostalgic, eerie, and strangely comforting all at once.
Fashion in the Age of the OGB
At the heart of AEOLIAN AFTERNOON stands the OGB — the Ominous Growing Brick. This looming fictional monolith serves as a metaphor for algorithms, consumerism, and the relentless demand for attention that dominates contemporary culture.
Rather than presenting a conventional runway narrative, Charles Jeffrey constructs an entire world around this concept. Fashion becomes both costume and commentary, exploring how identity is shaped in a landscape where entertainment, commerce, social media, and survival have become increasingly inseparable.
The result is a collection that feels timely without being overly literal. Through exaggerated silhouettes, handcrafted details, playful graphics, and an unmistakable sense of theatricality, LOVERBOY channels anxiety into creativity.
Handmade Resistance
Building upon themes introduced in the Autumn/Winter 2026 collection, SS27 embraces the tension between analogue craft and digital ennui. Drawing, collage, customization, and DIY experimentation become acts of resistance against homogenized online culture.
This season celebrates physical creation in all its forms. Garments appear as though they have been assembled through instinctive artistic exploration rather than rigid commercial planning. The collection’s handmade spirit reinforces Jeffrey’s ongoing belief that fashion should remain a space for imagination, individuality, and community.
There is a refreshing imperfection running throughout the collection—an embrace of process over polish that feels increasingly relevant in an era dominated by algorithmically optimized aesthetics.
Daytime Television Meets Surreal Fantasy
The presentation unfolds through a series of familiar yet uncanny daytime television segments hosted by recurring LOVERBOY characters Grom and Lin. The setting feels like a strange broadcast trapped between reality and fantasy, where the ordinary becomes unsettling and the absurd feels completely normal.


























References range from the dreamlike worlds of filmmaker David Lynch to the eccentric humor of the cult television series The Mighty Boosh, with a playful nod to British daytime talk shows. The combination creates a distinctly LOVERBOY universe: theatrical, humorous, chaotic, and deeply self-aware.
The Fashionably Male Take
Charles Jeffrey LOVERBOY Spring/Summer 2027 succeeds because it refuses to separate fashion from culture. AEOLIAN AFTERNOON is not simply a collection of clothes—it is a commentary on contemporary life delivered through music, performance, storytelling, and craftsmanship.
While many designers continue to explore technology’s influence on society, Jeffrey approaches the conversation through imagination rather than cynicism. His response to digital fatigue is not retreat but creation. The collection champions drawing, making, experimenting, and believing in the power of artistic expression.
In a season where menswear often gravitates toward restraint and minimalism, LOVERBOY offers something far more unpredictable: a colorful, strange, and thought-provoking reminder that fashion remains one of the most powerful tools for building new worlds.
Stylist Assistant: Grace Brackstone
Photographer: Harry Carr
MUA: Terry Barber
MUA Assistant: Iryna Tretiak
Hair: Maki Tanaka
Hair Assistant: Chikako Shinoda
Movement Direction: Kate Coyne
Set Design: Nana-Yaw Mensah
Lead Scenic: Maria Shrigley
Scenic: Chloe Littlewood
Set Build: Tom Hope, Toby Broughton, Alex Cunningham
Models: Ali Mutter, Quadri Olajuwon Lamidiajao, Zara Sands, Alex Chan
Production and Casting: Madi Swain, Josh Nice.
Soundscape: Tom Furse
Press Release: Bunny Kinney
Team: Naomi Ingleby, Ben Love, Dániel Rózsahegyi, Christopher Goodman, Alexandra Gibbs, Raquel Maillo Garcia, Odette Grummisch, Adélie Beese-Leroux, Ella Newey, Emma Istvánffy, Caoimhe Kelly, Nataliya Brady.
Assistants: Donna Piao, Lucie Oggel, Annelies Annys, Sally Huang, Mes Tammiso, Aria Fujiyoshi, Marco Vianello, Chiara Mandelli, Giorgia Trematerra



