Canali, the Italian suiting house founded in 1934, is adding a dedicated leisurewear line to lower the median age of its customer base, according to Glossy. Incoming creative director Alessio Lillocci told the outlet the brand aims to draw 35 percent of revenue from customers under 35 years old, a cohort that currently represents a smaller fraction of sales. The move follows Lillocci's hiring from Brunello Cucinelli, where he observed that casual product extensions could recruit younger buyers without eroding a luxury house's tailoring credibility.
The brand is not abandoning suits. Lillocci's directive is to introduce leisurewear—knits, soft trousers, unstructured jackets—as a parallel entry point, allowing younger customers to enter the brand through lower-commitment pieces before moving into tailored goods. The leisurewear will share fabric mills, finishing standards, and price architecture with Canali's core suiting, maintaining margin structure while broadening the addressable customer profile. The first leisurewear-focused capsule launches in spring 2025, sold through Canali's owned retail and select wholesale partners.
The mechanism works because product category is the lowest-friction lever for audience expansion. A heritage brand that launches a lower-price tier risks cheapening the parent line. A brand that chases youth through messaging alone irritates existing customers and confuses prospects. But introducing a new product category within the same price band and quality standard lets a brand speak to a different use case—and thereby a different buyer—without repositioning the mother ship. The younger customer buying a $800 knit polo is not cannibalizing the $2,400 suit sale; he is a net-new customer who may buy the suit in three years when his career or occasion set changes. The leisurewear line functions as a recruitment funnel, not a discount vehicle.
A small physical-product brand can run the same play with one SKU addition. Identify the product in your catalog that already skews younger or more casual in its usage occasion, even if it sells less volume than your core item. Create a capsule of two or three SKUs around that use case, using the same materials and construction as your mainline but styled for a less formal context. Price it in the same band as your core product—this is not a budget line. Launch it with a dedicated landing page that speaks to the new occasion, not the new demographic. The copy describes the use case (travel, weekend, off-duty) rather than the age of the buyer. Run paid social creative showing the new SKU in the casual context, targeted to a lookalike audience of your existing customers but filtered for age 25-40. Conversion rate will trail your core product in month one, but the customer file will skew younger. In month four, email the new buyers an offer on your mainline product, framed as a natural step-up. The leisurewear SKU is the door; the margin is in the second purchase.
The broader pattern is that category expansion beats price or message repositioning when a brand wants to recruit a new audience segment without alienating its existing base. The new category shares the brand's quality signals but targets a different job-to-be-done, allowing the brand to occupy two distinct usage occasions in the same customer's life or two different life stages in separate customers. The brand maintains one identity and one margin structure while doubling its addressable use cases.