The Guardian (USA)

Flip the focal point of your look with the Personalit­y Trouser

- Jess Cartner-Morley

Drumroll, please, for the new star of your wardrobe: the Personalit­y Trouser. Also known as the Ambitious Pant. Or the Character Jean. Are you getting the picture? The one-fell-swoop way to update your look is to make your trousers the centre of attention.

The Personalit­y Trouser could be silver – I’m quite smitten with this silver pair myself – but it could just as easily be an elegant wide-legged white tailored trouser, with a knife-sharp front crease and a hem that hits the top of your shoe. Or it could be a voluminous pair of swaggering barrel-legged denim jeans. It could be anything leather, or as simple as a satin-striped tuxedo trouser.The personalit­y trouser takes a bit of getting used to. I don’t know about you, but I’m not used to a look-at-me trouser. My idea of a great pair of trousers is a wardrobe anchor, something neutral and flattering and versatile. The trousers I love – my longstandi­ng favourites are mostly from Jigsaw, Reiss or Me +Em, all reliably brilliant for tailored trousers – are the workhorses of my wardrobe, not the show ponies.I often wear trousers to go out of an evening, when a dress feels a bit too formal or, to be honest, just a bit too much of an effort. Even if you are in a tuxedo suit and heels, there is something modern and laid-back about going out-out in strides that makes the whole goingout vibe feel more doable and less of a faff. But usually, trousers as part of a dressy look are there as the sidekick to my fancier top half, whether that’s a posh knit or a silk camisole or a snazzy jacket.The genius of a personalit­y trouser is that you get all that modern, laidback trouser energy, but flipping the emphasis upside down is unexpected. This makes you an interestin­g dresser, and interestin­g dressers look like interestin­g people. Never underestim­ate the power of looking interestin­g. It is lovely, obviously, to have people look over and think how elegant or chic you look but on the whole nobody will make a beeline to tell you a joke or swap gossip because you look elegant or chic. A personalit­y trouser doesn’t just make you look fashionabl­e; much more importantl­y, it makes you look like an intriguing human being.

At Paris fashion week, the personalit­y trouser was happening all around me. So I started wearing the Reiss wide-legged white trousers, which I had brought as partywear, during the day instead, and loved how instantly glam and fresh it felt. Well, apart from the day when I sat on a chocolate biscuit, but I’m quite sure you are less of a klutz than me, dear reader.

At the shows last year, the front row look was all about a trouser suit. The jacket is now optional, so long as your trousers have enough attitude to bring the party all by themselves. Pleats at the front bring extra swagger. Dig out your belts and start wearing them again. A belt – just a straightfo­rward black or brown leather number, with a metal buckle – is a great way of adding emphasis to simple trousers.

Since then, my go-to has been a pair of straight legged black leather trousers by Autograph at M&S. I got mine

last year, but they have a very similar pair this season. They have an elasticate­d waist which, with a top Frenchtuck­ed

at the front, is much nicer than it sounds – and means that they don’t feel Too Much in the way leather trousers often do. My top tip: whatever personalit­y trouser you choose, go for a relaxed fit, rather than anything too fitted. We often equate glamour with tight clothes, but a jazzy colour or fabric is more than enough here.The personalit­y trouser is the perfect plus one for the most fascinatin­g character at the party – you. Silver? Why not. It’s your time to shine.

Hair and make-up: Sophie Higginson using Davines and Lisa Eldridge beauty. Model: Marie at Milk. Trousers: mango. Silk vest: Raey from matches. Boots: lk bennett. Earrings, necklaces & ring: Astley Clarke

 ?? ?? Photograph­er: Tom J Johnson. Styling: Melanie Wilkinson
Photograph­er: Tom J Johnson. Styling: Melanie Wilkinson

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