Journal note
Fit comes before the first Salt & Silk collection.
Before Siren-Silk or Angel-Silk is presented as finished swimwear, Salt & Silk Group is treating fit, fabric behavior, opacity, movement, and sample review as part of the brand foundation.
Why Fit Comes First
Swimwear has to do more than photograph well. It has to stay composed near water, recover after movement, feel comfortable on the body, and keep its shape through real use. That is especially important for the two first Salt & Silk identities: Siren-Silk, with a bolder black swimwear direction, and Angel-Silk, with lighter bridal resort styling.
The brand can set a visual direction now, but final claims should wait for physical samples, fit review, and fabric testing.
Siren-Silk Fit Priorities
Siren-Silk is being shaped around black swimwear, confident lines, and a magnetic coastal mood. The fit work needs to support that energy with secure straps, considered coverage, strong back views, and clean construction that does not rely on heavy decoration.
The darker palette also needs fabric that holds color depth, keeps a smooth surface, and recovers after stretch.
Angel-Silk Fit Priorities
Angel-Silk is being shaped around ivory swimwear, refined silhouettes, and bridal resort ease. That makes opacity, lining, soft support, and fabric hand feel especially important before any public product detail is treated as final.
The goal is graceful swimwear that can move from shoreline to resort without feeling fragile or costume-like.
What We Will Document Next
As real samples arrive, the journal should track useful milestones: material direction, fit changes, opacity checks, movement notes, care considerations, and the point where owned product-development imagery can replace current directional visuals.