Mallorca in July feels like a secret that everyone somehow knows. The tourists arrive by the million and still, if you know which roads to take, you find yourself alone on a limestone cliff above water so clear it looks invented. The pine trees smell like heat. The sea is three different blues at once.
Kaluca was born here, in this specific quality of light. Every piece we make carries a trace of it — in the colour palette, in the decision to make things slowly, in the name (Kaluca is an island-sound, round and warm in the mouth).
The Colours of Mallorca
The Mallorca colour palette is specific. It is not the primary-colour blue of a travel poster. It is:
- Celeste — the particular blue-green of the Cala Pi cove at 11am before the boats arrive.
- Crema — the colour of the limestone cliffs and the sand at Es Trenc, not white but bone-warm.
- Rosa — the pink inside a wild almond blossom, the colour the sea turns for exactly forty minutes at sunset.
- Lila — the lavender shade that everything turns in the hour before dark, when the light loses its heat.
- Amarillo — the yellow of lemons, of sunlight on whitewashed walls, of the little wildflowers that appear between pavement cracks in Palma.
These are the five colours that built the Sun Ritual SS26 collection. You’ll find them in every piece.
Mallorca’s Best Beaches for Swimwear That Actually Works
Mallorca has over 200 beaches. Here are the five we design for:
- Es Trenc — the wild south coast beach. White sand, turquoise shallow water, no umbrellas for rent. Bring your own shade and nothing else. Wear something minimal that dries fast.
- Cala Mondragó — a natural park cove with protected pine forest. The water is deep and cold even in August. The walk in means you earn the swim.
- Caló des Moro — the most photogenic fifty metres of beach on the island. Arrives via a cliff path. Worth everything.
- Port de Pollença — the calm, family-friendly north. Long shallow bay, sailboats, the best lunch in Mallorca at a table directly above the water.
- Palma city beach — urban, buzzing, with a palm-lined paseo and a view of the cathedral from the water. The city beach for bikinis that double as going-out looks.
Why We Make Things Slowly Here
Mallorca moves at its own pace. Everything here resists rush — the long lunches, the afternoon closures, the concept that the sea will still be there after you finish your coffee. Making swimwear that fits this rhythm means making less of it, making it better, and making it worth keeping.
Every Kaluca drop is limited. When a piece sells out, it is gone. We do not restock — we move forward, to the next season, the next island, the next light.
Shop the Sun Ritual SS26 collection, made for this specific summer: kalucaswimwear.com/boutique.