Canali appointed Alessio Lillocci as creative director with a mandate to expand leisurewear and attract younger customers, according to Glossy. Lillocci, who previously worked at Brunello Cucinelli and Prada, is steering the 85-year-old Italian menswear brand away from its tailoring-first heritage toward a casual product mix that matches where younger luxury buyers are spending.
The move follows a pattern across legacy tailoring brands: keep the heritage signaling but shift the revenue mix. Canali will expand knitwear, outerwear, and unstructured pieces while maintaining its made-to-measure suiting. Lillocci told Glossy his strategy draws directly from Brunello Cucinelli's playbook — premium casual that commands tailoring margins without requiring a fitting appointment. The brand is not abandoning suits; it is adding a purchase occasion that does not require a wedding or a boardroom.
This works because younger luxury buyers — typically defined as under 40 — allocate discretionary spend to versatile pieces that move between contexts. A $800 merino crewneck or a $1,200 unlined sport coat fits more days than a three-piece suit. The margin structure holds because the brand equity was built on craftsmanship and Italian manufacturing, not on the garment category. Canali can charge knitwear prices that reflect its tailoring reputation without the cost base of made-to-measure labor. The customer pays for the name and the hand, not the canvas and the lining.
The demographic shift is the actual play. According to Glossy, Lillocci explicitly cited younger customers as the target. Legacy menswear brands face the same calculus: their core customer is aging, and younger buyers do not enter through formalwear. A 30-year-old buying his first luxury piece is more likely to start with a sweater or a jacket than a suit. Canali is rebuilding the acquisition funnel by meeting that customer at a different product entry point, then upselling into tailoring once brand affinity is established.
For a physical-product brand in any category, the steal is the same: identify where your legacy customer and your growth customer diverge on purchase occasion, then expand the product line to capture the growth customer without alienating the core. A leather goods brand known for briefcases can introduce crossbody bags. A kitchenware brand built on French ovens can add everyday skillets. The key is maintaining the quality and price signaling — the new product must reinforce the brand's established positioning, not dilute it.
Execute it by selecting one product that shares your manufacturing capability but serves a different use case. Canali's leisurewear still uses Italian mills and the same finishing standards; the garment construction is simpler, but the material quality is identical. A small brand can do this without retooling: use your existing supplier, specify a new form factor, and price it to reflect your brand's quality tier, not the category average. Launch with three to five SKUs, photograph them in the same style as your hero product, and describe them as an extension, not a departure. The customer should see it as "the brand I trust, now available for this other part of my life."
The broader pattern is that product-line expansion works when it is a bridge, not a pivot. Canali is not becoming a streetwear brand; it is giving younger customers a reason to buy now and a pathway to buy more later. The play is repeatable for any brand with a strong core and a narrowing customer base: find the adjacent product that serves the next cohort without breaking the signal your reputation is built on.
The takeaway
Expand product lines to serve new customer cohorts with adjacent offerings that maintain your quality signal and pricing tier.
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