Metal frames are once again setting the direction for eyewear this season, offering a clean, considered counterpoint to the oversized acetate shapes that have dominated recent years. Brands are moving toward lighter constructions and sharper geometry, focusing on frames defined by balance, proportion and careful finishing.
Designers are updating familiar shapes with subtle variations. Hexagonal lenses, often paired with cool blue tints, introduce a slightly futuristic edge, while perfectly round frames — sometimes doubled or haloed in fine wire — nod to a more archival, almost industrial sensibility. Elsewhere, slim rectangular silhouettes tap into a ‘90s minimalism, refined through ultra-thin temples and structures that look nearly invisible on the face.
Color plays a role, too, though it’s handled with restraint. Soft washes of green, blue and rose tint the lenses without overwhelming the frame, allowing the metalwork itself to remain the focal point.
Even more familiar shapes — like streamlined aviators — are rendered with a quieter hand, stripped of excess and reduced to their most essential lines.
The result: eyewear that feels both understated and expressive; a study in control, where small design gestures — an exposed bridge, a wrapped lens, a barely-there rim — carry outsized impact.
Matsuda titanium frame, $675

A study in construction, Matsuda’s round frame is defined by its delicate double-wire detailing — an industrial approach to eyewear.
Courtesy Madsuda
Brunello Cucinelli titanium frame, $933

Softly rounded with a subtle rose tint, this Brunello Cucinelli oval frame brings a more relaxed, tonal approach to metal.
Courtesy Brunello Cucinelli
Jacques Marie Mage beta titanium frame, $1,075

A geometric take on the metal revival, this hexagonal Jacques Marie Mage frame is sharpened further by cool blue lenses.
Courtesy Jacques Marie Mage
Oliver Peoples Jil Sander, titanium and crystal frame, $795.00

Stripped back to its essentials, this Oliver Peoples X Jil Sander slim rectangular silhouette leans into ‘90s minimalism.
Courtesy Oliver Peoples X Jil Sander








