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THE EDIIT | MARCH/APRIL 2026

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THE SPRING SHIFT

The EDIIT was founded by Ashley Cannon as a study in restraintan exploration of fashion, beauty and lifestyle through a lens that values clarity over excess.

With a background in visual storytelling and brand direction, her perspective is guided less by trend and more by instinct - an understanding of what feels considered, enduring and quietly impactful

Each issue reflects a deliberate edit: pieces chosen not for immediacy, but for their ability to hold relevance beyond the moment.

PURPOSE

The EDIIT exists to refine the way we see, select, and experience style - distilling what feels relevant while filtering out what does not last

EDIIT

EDIIT

The most defining shifts in fashion are quiet, yet undeniable.

This issue was shaped around one of those moments.

Lately, I’ve found myself returning to pieces that ask less and hold more.

After years defined by excess, speed, and constant reinvention, there is a clear return to something more measured. Less noise. More nuance. A way of dressing —and living—that values intention over immediacy

The ’90s have reentered the conversation, but not as nostalgia. What resonates now is the mindset: a quiet confidence, a sense of personal authority, and an understanding that style does not need to announce itself to be felt.

Throughout this issue, that perspective takes form in different ways: the precision of a silhouette, the repetition of a design, the balance between structure and softness. Pieces that feel considered rather than constructed. Discovered rather than dictated.

This is not about looking back.

It’s about recognizing what endures and why

AsTheEDIITcontinuestoevolve,theintentionremainsthesame:torefinethelensthroughwhichwesee fashion,beauty,andtheartoflivingwell.Tofocusnotonwhatisfleeting,butonwhatholds.

Ashley Cannon

UNDOHAIRWARENO
inLake|$32,2 KHAITEAudreyClutchinLeadSuede|$2,200,3

‘ 90s-

WYLDBOX

A MODERN HEIRLOOM WITH A ‘90S SOUL

Jewelry in the 1990s wasn’t about excess, it was about intention Pieces were personal, confident and quietly powerful. With Wyld Box Jewelry, founder Rosanna Fiedler revisits that era of independence and reinterpretation, crafting designs that feel both vintage and unmistakably modern.

There are certain decades that continue to shape the way women dress, express themselves and claim their presence. The 1990s were one of them. It was a time when style became less about perfection and more about intention - when women began defining elegance on their own terms. Jewelry reflected that shift:

strong yet understated, polished yet rebellious and always deeply personal.

It’s precisely within that tension that Wyld Box Jewelry finds its identity.

“Jewelry wasn’t decoration in the ’ 90s - it was attitude.”

WYLD BOX

Created as a tribute to the timeless allure of vintage artistry, Wyld Box reimagines heirloom jewelry through a distinctly modern lens. Each piece is thoughtfully composed. Considered in weight, proportion and finish; to feel instinctive rather than styled. These are objects designed to live with the wearer, not sit apart from her.

“THE’90SWERE ABOUTCONFIDENCE –WOMENOWNING SPACE,MAKINGBOLD CHOICESAND DEFININGSTYLEON THEIROWNTERMS,” FIEDLER REFLECTS. “THATENERGYFEELS DEEPLYALIGNED WITHWYLDBOX.”

That sensibility reveals itself not through excess, but through restraint. Forms are sculptural yet controlled. Surfaces catch light without demanding it. The balance is deliberate. Polish offset by edge, softness grounded by structure. Nothing feels overly composed; instead, each piece carries a sense of permanence, as if it has always belonged.

WYLD BOX

More than a visual reference point, the decade marked a shift in authorship. Jewelry became something chosen with intention.

“There was a raw independence to the ’90s woman,” says Fiedler. “She bought for herself. She dressed for herself.” That ethos continues to shape Wyld Box today. Each design carries a quiet self-possession, an understanding that presence does not require amplification.

At its core, Wyld Box approaches jewelry as something enduring. Not ornamental, but integral. Pieces that hold memory, weight and identity - returning to them again and again, not out of habit, but because they continue to resonate.

“The ’90s sit at a beautiful intersection of vintage glamour and modern edge...Wyld Box lives in that same space – honoring the past while designing for the woman of today.”

In an era increasingly defined by fleeting trends,

than

Wyld Box offers something far more enduring: jewelry that feels discovered rather
designedpieces that carry confidence, character and the quiet power of timeless style

FEATURES

A study in quiet precision, the Julia maxi from Heirlome reflects the brand’s devotion to craftsmanship Cut on the bias from textured crepe made with sustainably sourced viscose, the silhouette skims the body before falling into an elegant A-line drape. The result is fluid, refined and effortlessly composed.

Finished with a discreet back zip, the Resort ’26 design embodies a kind of modern minimalism that never feels momentary, only timeless.

HEIRLOME

Subtle Sophistication.

EDITOR’S TAKE | Style with contrast: a structured blazer or coat, a simple sandal or pump and restrained jewelry. Avoid layering or excess. The piece is most effective kept clean and considered.

GoldenAllure.

Crafted in Italy from luminous metallic leather, the Sway sandals from Aquazzura deliver instant polish with an elegant 85mm stiletto lift. The sleek silhouette catches the light with every step, striking the balance between statement and refinement. Consider them the finishing touch to evening looks where a subtle gleam is all that’s required

Sway85MetallicSandalsinGold,$1,085

EDITOR’S TAKE | Pair with a clean hemline - tailored trousers, a slip skirt or a minimal dress. Keep the rest of the look subdued. These are intended to catch the light without competing elements.

A striking juxtaposition of structure and ease, this black halter silhouette plays with proportion in all the right ways The deep V plunge frames the neckline, while a softly gathered drawstring waist introduces shape before releasing into a voluminous peplum hem Dramatic yet effortless, it captures the kind of modern minimalism that feels equal parts polished and undone.

DISSH

EDITOR’S TAKE | Anchor the volume with streamlined pieces - a straight skirt or tailored pant. Avoid excess adornments; the silhouette is most effective when left uninterrupted.

TammyBlackSleevelessCottonHalterTop,$147

HOWL

Rounded gold links cradle old Euro cut diamonds in a sequence that feels both organic and precise. Handmade in Los Angeles, light moves in measured repetition, creating a soft brilliance - never loud, always assured - while the silhouette remains fluid, almost architectural, balancing softness with structure. It carries a distinctly modern sense of polish - an understated statement that lingers rather than demands.

MEASURED BRILLIANCE

“WiththeOboDiamondNecklace, Iwasinspiredbyrepetition howa singleform,multiplied,becomes powerful.Eachsculptedgolddisc radiateslikeasmallsun,anchored byadiamondatitscenter.Thereis strengthinthecontinuity, a silhouettethatfeelsbothancient andunmistakablymodern.”

EDITOR’S TAKE | The proportion is the moment. Anything added should feel considered, not competing.

Architectural in form and quietly striking, the Cyme tote from Polène is defined by sculptural folds that shift with the way it’s carried. Designed to transform, the silhouette can be worn open in a basket shape or tucked inward to create a more structured, floral form. Rendered in textured black leather with contrasting ecru stitching, the piece balances artistry with everyday function.

EDITOR’S TAKE | Designed to shift in structure, the silhouette moves with the rhythm of the day. The attached pouch keeps small essentials contained - without disrupting the form.

The Odin studs from Camilla and Marc bring a sense of bold finesse to everyday gold. Defined by soft ridges that create depth and dimension, the geometric knot silhouette feels graphic, yet timeless. Finished in 18k gold plating, they offer just enough presence to anchor a look without overpowering it. PolishedImpact.

OdinStudsin18KGoldPlated,$200

CAMILLAAND MARC

EDITOR’S TAKE | When the earring carries this much presence, I tend to leave the neckline bareor opt for something extremely delicate.

The Myrna Pant approaches tailoring with a soft The silhouette follows on the body with an easy, allowing the Japanese triacetate satin to move w A seamless side construction keeps the profile cl internal grosgrain elastic waistband introduces c compromising the garment’s composed finish.

TheMyrnaBiasPantinOyster,$360

EDITOR’S TAKE | Clean through the waist, fluid through the leg - the silhouette falls exactly as intended. Nothing added should interfere.

A.EMORY

COS

EDITOR’S TAKE | Best with pared-back looks - tailored separates, knits or a clean dress - where everything is already in place. Added at the end, it brings just enough structure to refine the look without standing out.

A subtle nod to the restraint of ’90s minimalism, this black leather headband proves that the smallest details can define a look Wellexecuted lines and contrast topstitching lend quiet structure, while the smooth leather finish keeps the silhouette polished and unfussy. Effortless yet intentional, it recalls the era when simplicity carried its own kind of authority.

EDITOR’S TAKE | The fluidity is what defines itworn simply with a flat sandal during the day, then styled with a minimal heel for evening I’ll add a statement earring or a necklace - never bothfinished with a woven leather or mini raffia clutch. It transitions naturally, without needing to be reworked.

The Relaxed Pleat Dress approaches evening simplicity with a lighter hand. A softly scooped neckline and fine straps lead into a dropped waist, where pleats release into fluid movement through the maxi-length skirt. Discreet welt and side seam pockets add an element of quiet practicality. A piece designed to move naturally from daylight hours into evening plans.

Classic.

silhouette that feels distinctly ’90s in spirit, a jean from DL1961 favors crisp lines over The mid-rise, straight-leg cut creates a ned profile, while the classic bright blue eps the look classic. Sleek yet effortless, it’s of denim that anchors a wardrobe.

EDITOR’S TAKE | A reliable base that is easy to integrate. Worn simply, it holds everything together.

tasculpt™HighWaistAnkleStraightLegJeans inNorthBeach,$229

BEAUTY

REFINED RADIANCE

LESS

noise. MORE nuance.

The internet has a way of resurrecting cultural figures at unexpected moments. Sometimes it happens gradually. Other times, almost overnight.

The Quiet

The recent release of Love Story on FX and Hulu did exactly that reopening a chapter of American style history that never fully faded, but suddenly feels newly relevant. Almost immediately, Carolyn BessetteKennedy reentered the cultural conversation.

Archival photographs began circulating again. Old paparazzi shots resurfaced. Entire corners of the internet started cataloguing her wardrobe with the kind of scrutiny usually reserved for contemporary runway shows. The fascination is unmistakable.

Yet what makes this moment interesting is not simply nostalgia for the 1990s

It’s the realization that the aesthetic she embodied - clean lines, neutral palettes, deliberate simplicity - feels strikingly aligned with the direction fashion is moving today

In a landscape saturated with trends that appear and disappear at algorithmic speed, her approach to dressing reads almost radical in its consistency

Nothing felt forced. Nothing felt strategic.

Which, ironically, may be exactly why it continues to resonate

Carolyn Bessette Kennedy’s style was never about trends. It was about instinctand instinct rarely expires.

Minimalism has returned to the fashion conversation many times over the past three decades. Yet few figures have come to symbolize it as clearly as Bessette-Kennedy.

Her wardrobe - slip dresses, sharply cut coats, black trousers, barelythere accessories - reflected a sensibility that prioritized clarity over decoration.

The result was a kind of visual discipline that feels increasingly rare.

Today’s renewed fascination with her style reflects a broader shift taking place across fashion. After years defined by maximalism, branding, and hyper-visibility, there is growing interest in something more restrained.

The kind of dressing that communicates without announcing itself.

And if the internet’s current fixation is any indication, the reference point remains the same woman it has always been.

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