Scottish Daily Mail

The vest is back (just don’t call it a tank top)

HOW TO DRESS LIKE A GROWN UP

- Shane Watson

Vests have been around for well over a year now. these days they’re called vests — sleeveless sweater if you prefer — and not tank tops, as they were back in the 1970s when I was first wearing them.

Maybe that’s a deliberate ruse to reset our perception­s and banish all thoughts of rainbow stripes and Fair Isle. Anyway, the rebranded vest (chic, no Fair Isle) has been gradually building a fan base and now it’s a favourite with women who’ve recognised its potential as a soft power-dressing tool.

If that sounds like a line, it’s not. there are plenty of fun vests out there, and lots of designers have used them in their summer collection­s to inject quirkiness and colour — but these are a luxury, not a useful little hard worker.

the vests we’re talking about — plain knitted cotton for now, wool for later — are a wardrobe refresher that’ll sharpen up the clothes you already own.

As we’re getting back to the office, the knitted vest hits just the right spot: worn over a shirt, it’s smarter than a sweater and easier to fit under a jacket. If you have your shirt tails out, a vest will nip everything in and stop you looking too casual and undone.

If you want to tuck a top into some drawstring-waist track trousers, then a looser-fit vest smooths everything over and gives you some soft coverage around your waistband. It turns out a sleeveless pullover is a great puller-together.

so now it’s just a question of which to pick.

The smartest vests are round-necked, not too skimpy and stand away a bit on the shoulders. hush’s ribbed cotton knit in dusty blue (£55, hush-uk.com), h&M’s cashmere blend vest (£29.99, hm.com) or Me+em’s ribbed cotton cashmere vest in pale grey (£95, meandem.com) would all fit the bill.

that said, if the nothingund­erneath look is what you’re after, at least until the weather turns, then the way to go is a loose-fit V-neck. Cos does a chunky, cotton knit, ribbed one in a light grey melange with a slightly dropped sleeve (£59, cosstores.com). the advantage of the drop sleeve is that it covers your upper arms.

Personally I’ll be wearing my vest with a pretty collar peeping out, or full puffy sleeves, or both. Vests are perfect for indulging those flamboyant sleeves that you’re never quite sure when to wear, like my Me+em sheer balloonsle­eved shirt (£125, meandem. com). A vest worn over a blouse like this, with high-waisted trousers, works for the office, as well as for the smart-casual social thing afterwards.

My pick would be Me+em’s navy merino ribbed vest (£115, meandem.com); it has a stepped hem, allowing you to show off your waistband at the front and get some coverage at the back, and comes with a detachable polo neck.

I couldn’t help noticing that this item is the one the brand’s founder Clare hornby chose to wear in the front of the new catalogue (with a snood, bare arms and jeans). Voila! how to look chic and keep showing off your tan into early autumn.

Another tempting look, for minimalist­s who like to keep things sharp, is the longer line, plain V-neck, somewhere between a tunic and a sleeveless sweater. Me+em does a cotton merino longline vest (£125, meandem.com) which works well with longer skirts, and Cos has a cashmere, thigh-grazing, deep V-neck (£135, cosstores.com).

I can also picture — come the autumn — wearing Cos’s off-white lambswool V-neck with a flat collar and patch pockets (£59, cosstores.com). It would look good over a skinny polo neck or a pintucked white shirt, with wide-legged jeans.

Woollier styles are already in the shops, and while they are definitely more tank top — can’t get away from it — they look neat in their own way.

Brora does a honeycomb knit with a contrastin­g trim (£125, broraonlin­e.com) and & Other

stories has a grey wool vest with a scalloped neck and arm holes (£55, stories.com) which looks pretty over a white linen t-shirt.

then again, there will be a ton of woolly tanks in the shops in less than a month’s time, and by then you’ll be wanting stripes, jacquard prints, argyle checks and who knows what. It’s going to be a bumper vest season — so why not get in early?

 ?? Pictures:KARWAITANG/WIREIMAGE/VICTORBOYK­O/GETTY ?? Pulled together: Dior show
Pictures:KARWAITANG/WIREIMAGE/VICTORBOYK­O/GETTY Pulled together: Dior show
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 ??  ?? Inspiratio­n: Amanda Holden
Inspiratio­n: Amanda Holden

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