Harper's Bazaar (Singapore)

Summary of the Season

Step confidentl­y into fall in tall boots, midi skirts, and luxurious outerwear.

- By Lisa Armstrong

Is there a correct number of new-season pieces to buy to keep your signature look fresh and on point without your closet spilling over into SOS Marie Kondo territory? In an era when mindful consumptio­n is increasing­ly becoming an urgent aspiration, you should think in terms of what will make the most impact, then strategise your spending accordingl­y. This fall, I’d start with the feet because those cute ankle booties that have been your go-to for the past half decade may have just been nudged into the second row by taller boots.You can now channel après-ski in Chanel’s furry option that hits around mid-calf, or countryhou­se chic with slim jeans tucked into CELINE’s cosy over-the-knee shearling-lined boots.

The thing about tall boots is that they won’t just retune your standard sartorial setting—they’re also a gateway to an alter ego. Consider, for example, Victoria Beckham, who used lipstick-red and leopard-print peep-toe thigh-highs to catapult her ladylike midi skirts and romantic blouses into an alternativ­e universe where Nancy Pelosi borrows Beyoncé’s props. A glossy pair with a chunky heel can inject a hitherto conservati­ve little skirt suit (Akris) or a grunge-acious fringed blanket skirt (Salvatore Ferragamo) with a dose of attitude. Conversely, tall boots confer some modesty in skin-baring situations, so Saint Laurent’s puffball shorts and mile-high hemlines and the barely decent minis at Longchamp and Max Mara start to seem viable.

Yes, skirts are back. In addition to the above, they come highwaiste­d and curvy, paired with fitted blouses at Burberry, or three-quarter length and worn with adorably prim little scarf-neck wool-and-cashmere knits at Dior. Gabriela Hearst’s bellshaped midi skirts managed to be swishy, springy and unbelievab­ly deluxe. Inspired by her rodeo-crazed mom, they’re bias cut and probably 200-ply alpaca. Nothing looks more elegant and relaxed with a pair of flat riding boots and a slouchy sweater. If you’ve missed the versatilit­y of separates, this is the season

to get back together with them. “I categorica­lly refuse to design or wear anything that you can’t run or lie down in,” Hearst told me as we lounged on a cashmere sofa in her Paris showroom.

Even dresses are now required to behave like separates. Cut to skim and float around the body, many are expressly designed to glide under or over sweaters as well as work with jackets.At Chloé, Natacha Ram say-Levi colour-coordinate­d them with fine-g au ge turtleneck­s, turning them into a kind of care free dress suit. Donatella Versace unbuttoned her fluttery shirtdress­es over pencil skirts and under silky corsets.

If you’re concerned that tailoring is taking a backseat, let me take you momentaril­y behind the scenes a few days before the Alexander McQueen show, where Sarah Burton was poring over 18 separate toiles, which is probably half the number it took her to perfect the label’s new squared-off shoulders.At just over 40cm from tip to tip, they’re assertive rather than aggressive. “That word doesn’t feel right anymore,” said Burton. “What’s nice is hearing so many of the models this season say how strong but also how comfortabl­e they feel when they put on the clothes.” s.” True strength doesn’t need aggression. Memo to angry y tweeters everywhere.

“The shoulder is everything; it completely determines how a garment hangs,” Clare Waight Keller er said backstage after her Givenchy show, which shone e the spotlight on slender suits with high-waisted pants and belted jackets. High waists are everywhere, which is good news ews for those with short legs as they’ll look longer. Balenciaga a is 100 percent behind the pantsuit too, playing with gender-fluid -fluid silhouette­s and contrastin­g silk shirts. If that sounds tame me for this label, there were more of those disruptive peaked shoulders oulders (like Waight Keller, Demna Gvasalia has a shoulder fixation). xation).

Rest assured, the jacket is still very much a cornerston­e erstone of your closet. Don’t get hung up on single- or double-breasted, e-breasted, either—go with whatever works for you. It’s the wide, arrow-shaped lapels and sharp shoulder that make a jacket feel modern. If you already own checks, try a flame-throwing colour (Balenciaga), a fabricatio­n that borrows from military uniforms (Prada), or a shiny satin texture (Brandon Maxwell), any of which will boost its day-to-night capabiliti­es. Utilitaria­n fabrics, luxed-up and sometimes embellishe­d, are another facet of the flexi-dressing approach.At Dior, Maria Grazia Chiuri told me, “I try not to make things too precious. Even Dior customers want clothes that feel practical.”

This is not, you may be gathering, the season for twee prettiness. Not that florals have withered and died; from Prada’s big, ballsy blooms to Givenchy’s blur ry cluster sand Dolce&Gabbana’s drunk-on-life carnations, references have gone goth, as have the background­s they’re framed against. “The great thing about a black background,” Wayne Lee, one-half of the sibling duo behind the cult dress label Les Rêveries, explained to me,“is that you can wear them over dark hose.” Goth and pragmatic. Choose a substantia­l shoe such as Givenchy’s jolie laide platform loafers. If you must wear a kitten heel with a dress, make it a pair with dagger sharp heels like Miu Miu’s.

Finally, you should invest in a good cape, a blanket coat, a capelet, or an opera cape. Marc Jacobs went crazy for them all, as did so many other labels including Chanel and Prada. Some came with sleeves, some with belts (you’re going to need a wide one), while others were more like a cape-trench hybrid. And they’re ridiculous­ly desirable. One-size-fits-all. One piece covers all eventualit­ies. If you’re heading to Siberia, you could throw one over a coat. This multitaski­ng exemplifie­s fashion now. Buy less. Buy clever. And may all your choices deliver a power punch. ■

I f you’ve missed the this versatilit­y of separates, this is the season to get back together with them.

 ??  ?? Chloé fall/ winter 2019
Chloé fall/ winter 2019
 ??  ?? Gabriela Hearst fall/ winter 2019
Gabriela Hearst fall/ winter 2019
 ??  ?? Christian Dior fall/winter 2019
Christian Dior fall/winter 2019
 ??  ?? Chanel fall/ winter 2019
Chanel fall/ winter 2019
 ??  ??

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