There’s fashion—and then there’s Fear of God. Under Jerry Lorenzo’s creative direction, the brand has always delivered more than clothes. It offers a sense of purpose. With the launch of The Civil Collection, that vision deepens. This drop doesn’t just style the body. It speaks to the spirit.
Inspired by the dignity and self-possession of the Civil Rights era, the collection channels power without noise. These aren’t throwbacks or retro plays. Instead, this is a cultural reset. A reminder that what you wear can stand for something larger.
The Civil Collection doesn’t chase trends. It leans into presence. Every piece—every coat, trouser, and collar—feels rooted in intentionality. Each garment nods to a time when getting dressed was political. It was personal. It was power made visible.

Fear of God captures that feeling with precise cuts, muted tones, and timeless tailoring. The silhouettes are clean, but never cold. The pieces invite you to show up—not just styled, but seen.
To bring that energy to life, Lorenzo tapped director Mike Carson to create CIVIL, a short film built around motion and mood. No narration. No script. Just people moving through space, wearing garments that communicate dignity without a single word. It’s cinematic storytelling without a plot—just presence.
Lorenzo puts it plainly:
“Your clothes had to give you a feeling of dignity reflect the humanity that you were fighting for”



That belief shapes every thread in The Civil Collection. It’s a wardrobe rooted in reverence.
In a fast-fashion world, this collection urges us to slow down. To choose pieces with intention. To wear what reflects not just our taste, but our values.
The Civil Collection by Fear of God is now available online. And it’s not just worth seeing—it’s worth feeling.



