Reclaiming your name is one thing, redefining what it stands for is another. For Heron Preston, the relaunch of his eponymous label marks less of a comeback than a recalibration. After a prolonged battle to regain full ownership of his trademark from New Guards Group, Heron returns not with spectacle, but with stillness – stripping everything back to intention, authorship, and control.
“It feels like breathing again,” he says, describing the clarity that comes with independence after years of creative friction. That clarity forms the backbone of Foundation: Blue Line Edit, a quiet but deliberate reintroduction to the brand as a system of ideas rather than a constant cycle of seasonal releases.
How does it feel to have full control of your brand again?
It feels like breathing again. Truly a breath of fresh air! There's a lightness that comes with full ownership that I didn't realize I had lost until I got it back. Every decision, big or small, is mine now. That sounds simple but it's profound when you've lived the alternative. When your name, your identity, something you built with your own hands, is controlled by someone else, there's a constant friction. A constant negotiation between who you are and what the system will allow you to be. That friction is gone now. What's left is just clarity.
























