Grazia (UK)

Polly Vernon has her say

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AUTUMN STIRS, and my thoughts drift inexorably to My Look. What? I can’t help it! Global pandemic/reduced financial means notwithsta­nding: my fashion vibe is like an independen­t, organic life form, a flickering, urgent, forward-thrusting, ever-evolving consciousn­ess in its own right. Like life (according to Jeff Goldblum in the first Jurassic Park film): It Finds A Way.

Indeed, a perfunctor­y rifle through my wardrobe suggests it already has. Nestling within that hectic, hallowed space, sandwiched between the vintage 501s, lovely A/W ’19 Rixo maxidress I acquired pre-covid and have yet to wear, the bike shorts over which I didn’t even pause to wonder if I’m too old (I’m not – no such thing)… Rests not one, but seven new/ new-ish cardigans. A collection that has gently establishe­d itself through the course of the last weeks, and which, now I regard it in the cool light of mid-september sun, looks damn like ground zero on my new season’s vibe.

Why, it’s Cardi-geddon! I declare (quietly – you know: neighbours), for the impact of these seven renderings on that one knitwear concept are nothing short of seismic! Once you’ve nailed the top half, the rest falls into place, right? Everyone knows that. So it is – in the ribbed cotton crop in sage green from & Other Stories, the apricot diaphanous mohair that droops off the shoulders (Hasine), the sexy knitted blue scrap of pre-shrunken Musier Paris (made so it hasn’t a chance of fully fastening over your bra), and those others – that my mid-term fashion future manifests itself to me as clearly as it ever has. And it is cardigans.

But: of course it is! Does any one piece embody our current circs – our emotional state, our yearning for buttons, for cosy; the practicali­ties of our not-that-temporarya­fter-all makeshift working environmen­ts (WFH – but make it chic), our recently invigorate­d democratic sensitivit­ies, our re-heated ’90s nostalgia, our Now – like cardies? They are as emblematic of the current moment, as the miniskirt was of the ’60s, shoulder pads: the ’80s.

Also? ‘They saved my business,’ says Hayley Menzies, founder of one of my favourite independen­t labels (same name, people, same name). ‘No question.’ We’re having a drink, lamenting the intervenin­g months but celebratin­g our still being here, when she tells me an accidental over-ordering of her signature Leopardess duster cardi – one she’d tried and failed to cancel at the beginning of lockdown

– had ended up an instant sell-out, an Instagram sensation (high-fashion housecoats: the dernier cri in locked-down Influencer elegance), and her business’s saving grace. I lap it up. I so love happy endings, these days. I crave them.

Saved by a cardigan! Hayley and I ‘cheers’. I drink, and look forward to an autumn of directiona­l cardigan wearing; relaxing into the sense something pressing has been resolved – and revelling in a half-forgotten, precious certainty of what the next few months will bring, if only for my clothes.

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