Loghan Troadec’s “Le Portrait d’un Paysan” collection feels like a memory. It calls back to a specific time and place, built from the raw material of a childhood spent outdoors. The inspiration is clear and direct: days measured by tree climbs, races across open fields, and the close study of nature. It was a world where everything could become part of a game, transformed by imagination.

This personal history is the foundation. Troadec comes from Brittany, and the region’s particular mix of land and sea left a permanent mark. The collection becomes a way to honor that territory. But the focus expands beyond nostalgia. It aims to highlight the working hands that shape these landscapes, the people whose daily efforts provide what we need to live.

There is a special note of recognition for his farming grandparents and all others who work the land to feed us. This gratitude is the central message. The work becomes a quiet thank you to a region, its people, and the planet itself.

Check it out below: