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Women’s Jumpsuits and Dresses in Cotton, Silk, and Knit
There is a moment, pulling a dress over your head in the morning, when the fabric decides everything. Cotton gauze settles around you with a little weight and a soft crinkle that never quite flattens, the kind of cloth that looks better creased than pressed. It is the opposite of a dress that asks to be fussed over. You put it on and forget about it, and somehow that is when it works hardest, through a long afternoon, under a coat when the air turns, holding its shape long after a pressed silk would have wilted.
A silk slip dress is the other instinct entirely. Cut close and long, it moves a half-second behind the body and lives or dies by how little is done to it, and the right one will carry you from an early dinner into whatever the evening becomes. The trick is what you put against it. A knit thrown over the shoulders takes the chill off and softens the whole line, a shirt dress worn open turns it into a layer rather than a statement, and in the depth of winter, a wool dress does the same work with more weight behind it. None of it is precious. It's dressing done with a little more attention than usual.
Most of these are made to be layered as the weather turns, cotton dresses over trousers, a coat over a slip, the kind of dressing that moves from day into night and from one season into the next. For the pieces that build around them, look to the tops & blouses, and pants & skirts, or new arrivals for what has just come in. These are clothes made in natural fiber, cut by small mills and the hands of people who care how they are made, and meant to stay with you long after the season that brought them.






























































































