Glossier’s signature shade of millennial pink has appeared on everything from Cloud Paint blushes to hoodies to limited-edition water bottles, but never before has it been applied to a leash. That changes this month with the Pink Capsule Collection, a merchandise drop that extends the beauty brand’s lifestyle offering into the pet category for the first time. The collection includes a sweatshirt, an errand bag, a dog leash, a collar, a pet waste bag dispenser, and coordinating waste bags — all rendered in the exact shade of pale rose that has become Glossier’s visual calling card.
The pieces are more than novelty items. The leash is constructed from a heavy-duty nylon webbing with a reinforced clip and a padded handle; the collar is lined in a soft jersey material designed for extended wear. The waste bag dispenser attaches to the leash via a carabiner and holds a roll of biodegradable bags stamped with the Glossier logo — a touch that converts a mundane chore into a brand moment. The accompanying sweatshirt, cut in the brand’s relaxed Boyfriend silhouette, and the canvas errand bag with an interior zip compartment, extend the collection’s logic: this is merchandise designed for actual use, not display.
Priced between $8 for the waste bags and $85 for the sweatshirt, the collection occupies an accessible sweet spot that encourages impulse purchases and gift-giving. Limited-edition drops have become Glossier’s primary mechanism for maintaining cultural relevance outside of product launch cycles, and the Pink Capsule Collection — with its inherent shareability and companion-animal charm — is engineered for Instagram virality. Whether it signals a permanent expansion into pet accessories or remains a one-off seasonal novelty, the collection demonstrates the elasticity of the Glossier brand: a company that can convince its customers that even the act of picking up after their dog can be done in pink.
The drop taps into a cultural moment that extends well beyond pet ownership. The ‘dog as accessory’ phenomenon has evolved into something more complex — a recognition that pet products occupy the same identity-signaling space as clothing and beauty. Glossier’s customer, who has already bought into the brand’s philosophy of skincare as self-care, now has the opportunity to extend that ethos to her dog. The collection also speaks to a broader strategy at the brand: the expansion of Glossier from a beauty company into a lifestyle label that can license its visual identity across categories without diluting its core message.


