Tyler, The Creator Announces Final Collection of His Clothing Line
The season four collection of le Fleur will arrive on Dec. 6; but there won’t be any more clothing drops.
Tyler, the Creator attends FX's "The Bear" season 3 premiere at El Capitan Theatre on June 25, 2024 in Los Angeles, California.
Photo by Rodin Eckenroth/WireImage.
Tyler, The Creator is ending his le Fleur clothing line. He announced on Instagram that the final collection is arriving Saturday, Dec. 6, while sharing that le Fleur will continue to sell fragrances and accessories and will join certain specific collaborations, but there won’t be any more clothing collections after season four.
“Making clothes. my second passion,” he wrote. “I started this back in 2019 as a side project. the goal was to mirror things that matched my personal style. it grew into a very special world of specific colors, shapes, patterns, etc … this has taken me to places ive dreamed of. louise trotter gave me my first real chance at lacoste. virgil helped shape the blueprint on getting things made. Pharrell opened the doors at louis vuitton. im forever grateful for every helping hand that understood the language. i never wanted to be in the lookbooks or campaigns but for this last one it felt right ( i was the fit model afterall).”
The Grammy winner acknowledged that clothing design helped feed his creativity, but he needs to pace himself more now.
“It was a language I wanted to create, but now its time to slow down on communicating,” Tyler explained. “Thank you to everyone who supported the idea. customers, set hands, vendors, photographers, models and ESPECIALLY THE TEAM. Darren, Kaiden, Ruby, Panch, Tara, the whole squad! i love yall. its been awesome.”
Tyler has had a busy 2025. He kicked off his CHROMAKOPIA: The World Tour back in February at Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul, Minnesota, before wrapping things up in the Philippines in September. Tyler also dropped his ninth album, Don’t Tap The Glass, in July. Upon its release, Tyler reflected on the listening party for Don’t Tap The Glass and what it made clear for him.
“There was a freedom that filled the room,” Tyler continued. “A ball of energy that might not translate to every speaker that plays this album but man did that room nail it.”