Green has a grounding quality that most colours simply do not. It reads as intentional without being loud, which is exactly what you want from a jacket when you need an outfit to look like it was thought about. We have become genuinely obsessed with green jackets as the finishing layer, the thing you throw on over something simple and suddenly the whole thing coheres. A white shirt and wide leg trousers is fine. Add a forest green blazer and it becomes an actual look. That is what we mean by pulling a look together. It is not about matching. It is about anchoring.

We have been pulling together green jackets across every shade and silhouette because the range within this colour is enormous. Sage works differently from olive, which works differently from bottle green, which works differently again from a bright emerald. There are tailored options here, more relaxed shapes, leather alternatives, and lightweight options that work from spring through to early autumn. All of them earn their place. Green is not a neutral, but it behaves like one, and that is a genuinely rare thing to find.