LIFESTYLEOPINION

From Bedroom to Boardroom: Why Pyjamas Are the New Officewear

Bedroom chic is stepping into the corporate corridors

Share
Pyjamas Are the New Officewear
bedroom chic is stepping into the corporate corridors.
Share

In their Spring/Summer 2026 men’s collection, Italian luxury fashion house Dolce & Gabbana boldly embraced an unconventional daytime wardrobe staple, in a bid to rewrite the rules of corporate wear: the pyjama.

Yes, you read that right: bedroom chic is stepping into the corporate corridors. At first glance, the collection feels like an ode to Italian summers — Amalfi dreams, espresso mornings, and a lingering sense of la dolce vita.

But when you take a closer look, what you’ll see is a sharp, tailored evolution of leisurewear. This is not sleepwear in the traditional sense.

These pyjamas — rendered in featherlight cotton jacquard and tastefully striped in varying widths — carry a sense of ease that’s both deliberate and empowered. They are just as much at home on a beach terrace as they are in a high-level boardroom meeting — and that duality is what makes them powerful.

> Kenya is Ranked Among Top 10 Emerging Fashion Hubs in the World

For Kenyans navigating both the fast-paced energy of Nairobi’s urban grind, or enjoying the laid-back elegance of a coastal weekend in Diani — this approach offers something refreshingly new. It poses a simple question: why can’t comfort and authority coexist?

Dolce & Gabbana’s pyjama-led silhouettes revive the relaxed tailoring of the 1980s — think wide hems, pleated trousers, and oversized shirts that float rather than cling. It’s not about sloppiness; it’s about intention.

The knitwear joins the conversation too: breezy cardigans and rope-textured pieces bridge casual and crafted in a way that feels almost artisan — a resonance not unfamiliar in East African handwoven traditions.

The styling choices play with contrasts: pyjama shirts peek out from under sharp blazers, crumpled textures layer against smooth tailoring, and ribbon-tied waists add a quiet, almost sensual edge. This isn’t just a look — it’s a feeling. The kind that says, “I belong here, on my own terms.”

But the real twist comes when the sun sets. Dolce & Gabbana flips from resort-mode to runway glamour — pyjama tops are adorned with crystal embellishments, lapels shimmer with hand-sewn stones, and neutral tones take on a quiet luminosity.

It is pyjama by day, tuxedo by night — with zero costume play. The palette stays rooted — beige, cream, navy, earthy green, and classic black — a nod to restraint. But in classic Dolce style, pops of leopard and playful polka dots sneak in, like a knowing wink.

For the bold and woke Kenyan urban man increasingly unafraid to push style boundaries — from fashion-forward creatives in Nairobi to the sharply-dressed on Sundays in Kisumu — this collection offers inspiration on how to straddle confidence and comfort.

In a world that’s rethinking how we show up — to the office, to events, to ourselves — maybe the answer isn’t a stiff suit, but something softer. Something striped. Something spontaneous. Unconventional. Something that lets us exhale — yet still stamps authority. It commands the room.

> Kenyan Student’s Bold Womenwear Collection Wins UK Fashion Award 

Written by
OORO GEORGE -

Ooro George is a Kenyan journalist, blogger, editor-at-large, art critic and cross-cultural curator.

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

PAST ARTICLES AND INSIGHTS

Related Articles
Oil rig at the Ngamia-1 well in the Lokichar basin.
BUSINESS

Govt: Decade-Long Stalled Turkana Oil Project Set to Begin Next Year

Kenya is on the verge of finally unlocking commercial oil production in...

CBK headquarters in Nairobi
FEATURED STORY

CBK Receives Bids Worth KSh53.1Billion at Auction, a 132.8% Oversubscription

CBK(Central Bank of Kenya) received bids worth KSh 53.1 Billion at the...

From left - KCB Bank Kenya Director of Retail Banking, Jane Isiaho and Visa Country Manager and Senior Business Development Leader for Kenya, South Sudan and Somalia, John Njoroge during the launch of Tap-To-Phone solution which will enable business owners to accept card payments directly on their Near-Field Communications (NFC) enabled Android smartphones without the need for a traditional point-of-sale (POS) machine.
BUSINESS

KCB and Visa Partner to Enable Card Payments via Smartphones

KCB Bank Kenya has partnered with Visa to launch a Tap to...

Outside Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) headquarters in Nairobi.
BUSINESS

Treasury, CBK Sound Alarm as Financial Health Collapses Despite Inclusion Boom

The National Treasury and the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) have released...