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VISVIM COPA SHIRT SS26 IS 100% SILK WITH BONE BUTTONS

By FINALLY OFFLINE | 6/27/2026

Visvim Copa Shirt S/S for SS26 is a 100% silk shirt with three embroidery techniques, custom bone buttons, and an Oxford collar from workwear silhouettes. Hiroki Nakamura published a 400 word essay explaining why thread produces warmth and dimensional texture that dyeing and printing cannot replicate. The back embroidery reads INQUALITY WE TRUST, the brand's operating motto since 2001.

Key Points

100% silk. Pressed finish. Three embroidery methods on one shirt. Visvim's Copa Shirt S/S for SS26 arrives with a product code, a material spec, and a 400 word essay from Hiroki Nakamura about why thread does something no dye or screen print can. The SKU is 0126105011001. The claim is that embroidery, specifically the kind that takes time and human attention, produces warmth in a garment that industrial processes cannot replicate. ## 0126105011001. Three Embroidery Methods on One Silk Surface. The Copa Shirt carries three distinct embroidery approaches. Hand embroidery, where each stitch is set individually with a needle, produces output that no two pieces can share exactly. Handle operated sewing machine embroidery is steered manually by the operator, which means the person doing the work leaves their character in the finished piece. Machine embroidery handles motifs that require precision at consistent scale. Nakamura notes in his own product text that the decision about which technique to apply comes from the motif itself and from the character of the material underneath. On 100% silk, the embroidery choice carries more weight than on cotton or nylon. The yarn sits against a surface with natural luster, which means every stitch is immediately visible in its three dimensional form. Flat printing produces color on a surface. Thread produces mass, texture, and a raised quality that the eye reads before the brain identifies the motif. [Finally Offline covered Nigo's BAPE and the role of Japanese craft obsession in building a brand culture](/quick/bape-invented-hype-culture-before-it-had-a-name-2026-qx9r4tle); the same material seriousness that runs through Visvim's design logic was present in that era too, even if the price points and market positions diverged sharply. ## Silk Against a Workwear Template The Copa's silhouette comes from workwear and military casualwear. Short sleeve. Oxford collar. Button front. Pressed finish. These are the bones of a U.S. Army summer shirt, filtered through Japanese outdoor and heritage contexts that Visvim has worked consistently since 2001. Placing 100% silk inside that template is a deliberate contradiction. Workwear fabrics resist wear. They absorb abrasion. Silk drapes, catches light, and reads as luxury before any branding is considered. Nakamura writes that workwear and military silhouettes tend to read as simple and rugged in base materials, but that embroidery added on top of them creates something that is warmer and softer in appearance. The silk accelerates that transformation before a single stitch is placed. The bone buttons finish the argument. Plastic is a cost decision that undercuts the material story at the closure. Bone signals craft, natural material, and a value tier that plastic cannot reach. Every detail on this shirt is legible as a position about what Visvim believes a garment should say. ## The Back Embroidery States the Brand's Working Thesis The Copa Shirt's rear carries the full "INQUALITY WE TRUST VISVIM / V Trophy LOGO" embroidery. That phrase has been Visvim's operating principle since the early 2000s. Not quantity. Not hype. Not collab frequency. Quality, and the trust that comes from consistently choosing harder production paths. In the context of SS26, where most brands are accelerating output to capture news cycle attention, Visvim is publishing a 400 word essay about the difference between hand embroidery and handle operated machine embroidery and placing it in the product listing. That is not a marketing strategy. It is a position. [Carpet Company's Season 22 polo took embroidery in a different direction](/quick/carpet-company-season-22-polo-drop-july-4-2026-nw5p8rtx), applying the technique at a more accessible price point and showing the range of what stitching can accomplish across different tiers of production commitment. In music production, the parallel is the producer who publishes their session notes alongside the record: rare, usually revealing, and trusted by the listeners who already know what to hear for. ## Grailed in a Week. Retail While It Lasts. Visvim silk pieces at this construction level typically arrive in the $650 to $950 range, though official pricing for SS26 has not been confirmed outside Japan domestic channels. The Copa will sell through at flagship and stockist level in Tokyo within days. On Grailed and Japanese resale markets, expect a 20 to 40 percent premium within two weeks of the drop. The value case for buying at retail is straightforward. Three embroidery techniques applied to 100% silk with bone buttons and a pressed workwear silhouette refined over 25 years of iteration is difficult to find at this price range anywhere in the current market. If you have access to retail, the Copa Shirt earns the ask. If you are buying at secondary, calculate whether the premium delivers the same per wear value against the original price.

Topics: visvim, hiroki-nakamura, silk, embroidery, fashion, ss26, japanese-menswear, workwear, luxury, copa-shirt

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