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Le Vestiaire by Cordelia de Castellane at SofitelLe Vestiaire by Cordelia de Castellane at Sofitel">

Le Vestiaire by Cordelia de Castellane at Sofitel

Alexandra Dimitriou, GetBoat.com
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Alexandra Dimitriou, GetBoat.com
4 minuter läst
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Februari 19, 2026

Distribution planning for Le Vestiaire will cover roughly 120 properties och 25,000 employees, with a phased global rollout starting at the end of 2026; supply-chain preparations include regional warehouses, customs-clearance strategies for outfits bound for Sofitel Dubai The Obelisk, Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi and Sofitel Bali Nusa Dua, and climate-specific fabric allocations for hot, humid and temperate destinations.

Logistics and rollout mechanics

The collection comprises more than 45 core pieces and a curated selection of accessories, and it was trialed with 110 employees across multiple roles to fine-tune sizing and durability. Implementation teams are coordinating inventory by position — 25 role categories from Front Office to Housekeeping — so that each hotel can order a tailored mix that reflects local style and operational needs.

Key logistical actions being taken:

  • Centralized procurement with regional distribution hubs to reduce transit times and customs friction.
  • Climate-adaptive allocations — breathable blends for tropical marinas, insulated options for cooler urban locations.
  • Repairability pathways built into service networks so garments can be mended locally, extending lifecycle and lowering replacement frequency.

Numbers at a glance

MetricFigur
Properties120
Employees impacted25,000
Core pieces45+
Positions (role types)25
Pilot participants110 employees

Design ethos and adaptability

Le Vestiaire, created in collaboration with French designer Cordelia de Castellane, blends couture sensibility with everyday functionality. Pieces were designed to be mix-and-match so hotels can curate looks that reflect local culture while keeping the brand’s signature French elegance. The collection’s palette — navy blue, coconut milk, beige and denim blue — was chosen to be universally flattering across complexions and environments.

How hotels will customize the collection

  • Property-level curation: each hotel selects combinations appropriate to its climate and guest profile.
  • Modular styling: accessories like belts and scarf brooches featuring the Cultural Link logo provide brand continuity without uniformity.
  • Role-specific adaptations: silhouettes and fabrics vary for front-of-house, back-of-house and banquet teams to match movement and comfort needs.

Flagship pieces and practical notes

Highlighted items include La Saharienne (a modern safari jacket), Le Gilet Cintré (the tailored vest available sleeveless), and La Robe Iconique (a signature midi dress). These pieces were shaped by atelier-level attention to tailoring and movement to ensure they perform throughout a shift — from check-in rushes to evening service.

Operational considerations for hospitality and marine contexts

Hotels with on-site marinas and resort berths should note the collection’s practical features: quick-dry fabric options, corrosion-resistant buttons suitable near saltwater, and modular layers that suit both shafted service areas and open-deck tasks. For properties that host yacht crews or offer charter interfaces, coordinated uniforms can strengthen brand experience for guests arriving by sea.

Sustainability and lifecycle

Le Vestiaire is positioned under Sofitel’s Committed Luxury approach: fabrics selected for durability and breathability, repair-friendly construction, and a focus on longevity over fast replacement. Pieces are meant to be repaired rather than discarded, a practical choice that reduces procurement frequency and waste across hotel operations.

Design collaboration and cultural sensitivity

Maud Bailly, CEO of Sofitel, MGallery and Emblems, framed the rollout as part of a broader wave of hotel renovations and openings that call for refreshed staff presentation. Cordelia de Castellane brought a couture perspective while prioritizing inclusivity and comfort, ensuring silhouettes work across diverse body types and cultural preferences. The monogram and Cultural Link details translate the brand’s visual identity into wearable design language.

Practical benefits for sailing and charter hubs

For marinas, superyacht berths and charter operators, a cohesive but flexible staff wardrobe supports guest-facing services — from dockside check-ins to concierge escorting guests to a sunseeker or superyacht. Clear, well-maintained uniforms reduce confusion in busy marina environments and help crews and captains identify hotel staff quickly during embarkation and tendering operations.

To sum up, Le Vestiaire combines a couture-rooted aesthetic with operational pragmatism: an inventory-managed rollout across 120 hotels and 25,000 employees, climate-aware fabrics, repair-focused sustainability, and modular styling that allows hotels and resort marinas to curate local expressions. The collection’s numbers, practical design and distribution plan mean Sofitel properties — from urban flagships to beachfront resorts and marinas — can enhance guest experience with a consistent, adaptable wardrobe that bridges hospitality and waterfront activities, whether hosting a yacht captain, arranging charter transfers, or welcoming guests for boating and beach days.