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Srixon Goes Green for Golf’s Big Spring Major

Srixon has chosen its moment well. As the game slips into that feverish stretch when every practice ground starts to feel a little more purposeful and every golfer suddenly believes this might be the year, the brand has unveiled a Limited-Edition Spring Collection that knows exactly what it is doing.

Built around the familiar green-and-white colour palette tied, in spirit if not by name, to the season’s first major, the new Srixon range is part celebration, part wardrobe adjustment for the part of the golfing year when everything seems to matter a touch more.

This is not a club launch dressed up in technical jargon or a pile of lifestyle tat pretending to belong on a golf course. It is a clean, tournament-inspired accessories collection aimed at players who like their bag to look sharp, their kit to feel coordinated, and their spring golf to arrive with a bit of ceremony.

A spring collection with proper golfing instincts

There is a temptation with limited-edition releases to overdo it. Too much colour. Too much theme. Too much “look at me” energy. Srixon, to its credit, has avoided most of that nonsense.

What it has produced instead is a collection that feels rooted in the sport’s most recognisable spring mood. The green-and-white palette is classic without feeling dusty, and the overall effect is polished rather than loud. It nods to a famous week in the golfing calendar without looking like it has wandered out of a souvenir tent.

Felix Teodoro, Product Management Analyst at Srixon, explained the thinking behind the release: “Spring is when the energy around the game really starts to build. This collection taps into that momentum with a look that’s both fresh and rooted in the traditions of this major championship, while capturing the excitement of the season.”

That is a fair summary. Golf brands often talk about heritage as though it were a magic spell. Here, Srixon has actually used it with a bit of discipline.

Three bags, three different jobs

Srixon Bags 2026

At the centre of the Srixon Spring Collection are three golf bags, each aimed at a slightly different sort of player and round.

The Tour Staff Bag, priced at $549.99, is the headline act. This is the big, bold number designed to be seen from several fairways away. It is the sort of bag that makes a statement before you have even pulled a club. For golfers who love tour-level presentation and want their equipment to look every inch the part, this will be the eye-catcher.

Then there is the Stand Bag at $399.99, which is likely to be the practical sweet spot for a lot of players. It keeps the collection’s visual identity intact but brings it into the real world, where people carry, walk, travel and occasionally have to squeeze everything into the back of a car already full of waterproofs and regret.

Finally, the Sunday Bag, at $199.99, offers the lightest, most relaxed option in the range. This one feels made for the spring evening nine, the casual bounce game, or those rounds when you carry half a set and all the optimism in the world.

The smaller details are where this works

The bags will get most of the attention, but the supporting cast matters. Srixon has rounded out the collection with headcovers ($39.99), a major-themed hat ($34.99) and a towel ($29.99), turning the release into a full bag-dressing exercise rather than a one-off statement piece.

There is also a nice touch tucked inside the bags: hidden badge-style graphics that reference one of golf’s most exclusive traditions, the sort of insider wink that will appeal to golfers who enjoy the culture of the game as much as the mechanics of it.

That matters more than brands sometimes realise. Golfers are detail people. They notice stitching, trim, lining, logos and whether a design idea has been followed through properly. This collection appears to have been built by people who understand that.

From tour theatre to everyday golf

Srixon’s timing is also smart. Its tour staff will carry the limited-edition Staff Bag and Headcover during tournament week, which gives the collection visibility on one of the sport’s biggest stages and lets it live where it is supposed to live: inside the ropes, not just on a product page.

That kind of exposure helps, of course, but it also gives the range credibility. A tour-inspired collection has to look believable in elite company. From what Srixon has shown, this one should.

More importantly, it does not feel like a product made only for the television cameras. The Staff Bag may be pure theatre, but the Stand Bag and Sunday Bag bring the line back to earth. That gives the collection broader appeal. It is aspirational without becoming silly.

Who this Srixon collection is really for

This is for the golfer who enjoys the rituals of the season. The one who gives the clubs a proper clean before the first big spring medal. The one who notices what players are carrying on tour. The one who wants a bag setup with some identity, but not so much identity that it looks like it has been styled by a hen party.

It will appeal to loyal Srixon players, naturally, but also to golfers who simply like limited-edition golf gear done with a steadier hand. There is enough restraint here to keep traditionalists onside, and enough personality to attract buyers who want something more distinctive than standard-issue accessories.

Price, availability and final word

The full Srixon Spring Collection launches on April 1, 2026, with prices as follows:

  • Spring Major Collection Staff Bag: $549.99
  • Spring Major Collection Stand Bag: $399.99
  • Spring Major Collection Sunday Bag: $199.99
  • Spring Major Collection Headcover: $39.99
  • Srixon Major Hat: $34.99
  • Spring Major Collection Towel: $29.99

In the end, this is a tidy piece of seasonal product design from Srixon. It understands the mood of spring golf, respects the traditions orbiting the year’s first major, and avoids the trap of trying too hard. That alone puts it ahead of a good many themed golf launches.

For players who like their gear to mark the moment as much as their scorecard does, Srixon has produced a collection that feels timely, usable and just polished enough to turn heads without begging for the attention. In golf, that is usually a sign of good judgement.

To shop Srixon’s Limited-Edition Spring Collection, visit us.dunlopsports.com/srixon.

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