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Made to Move: Wide-Leg Pants, Culottes, and Skirts in Natural Fiber
A good pair of trousers earns its place by how little you have to think about it. The waist sits where it should, the leg follows you instead of fighting you, and the cloth keeps its own weight through a long day. That is where Yuka Izutsu starts, not with a silhouette but with the fabric itself, sourced from small mills and artisans she has worked with for years, from the countryside of Japan to the highlands of Peru.
Linen earns its place in summer, cut here into a wide-leg pant that stays cool through the afternoon and creases the way good linen always has. Corduroy and wool take the colder end of the year, warm without the stiffness you get from heavier cloth, and they suit cropped pants especially well, since the shorter line sits clean above a boot. Cotton gauze and baby alpaca are the fabrics customers keep coming back for. The cotton is crinkled rather than pressed, softens with every wash, and folds down small enough that the gauze styles have become the ones worth packing, while baby alpaca is lightweight and keeps you warm in the cold. It’s also highly breathable and can regulate temperature to keep you from overheating in moderate weather.
The skirt pants read as a skirt and wear as trousers, and that double life is why they stay in rotation. Around them sit fuller shapes like culottes that stop at the calf and pair with a flat or low heel and balloon pants that move easily and stay out of your way. Among the skirts, an asymmetrical hem catches the light differently as you walk, wool skirts see you through winter, and alpaca, the softest of them, goes into the pieces you wear closest to the skin and keep through the seasons.
Built to be worn together or apart, these are pants and skirts for women who dress for years rather than seasons, the kind of pieces you layer differently each time and keep far longer than most.
For the matching halves and pieces worth keeping just as long, see Matching Sets and Dresses & Jumpsuits.




























