The Sari Across Centuries
Six yards of unstitched cloth, worn continuously on the subcontinent for three millennia. A history of the longest-lived garment in the world.
An Illustrated Archive of Style
Six yards of unstitched cloth, worn continuously on the subcontinent for three millennia. A history of the longest-lived garment in the world.
Three essays on the garments, houses, and movements that shaped the century.
At 430 King’s Road, in the years 1974 to 1976, a boutique began selling bondage trousers and the end of the 1970s. Neither arrived quietly.
A single-indigo twill, first woven for dockworkers in Genoa, crossed the Atlantic and rode out with the miners. A hundred and fifty years later, it is the closest thing humanity has to a common uniform.
Before the colour had a Pantone number, it had a bottle. The surrealist couturier who tinted the twentieth century.
An age of whalebone, crinolines, and rigid propriety, yet also of radical industrialization that transformed how clothing was made and worn.
The drop-waist dress, the bob, and the scandal of visible ankles. Chanel, Lanvin, and the birth of modern womenswear.
Dior's wasp waist, the ascendance of haute couture, and a postwar romance with volume and femininity.
Hip-hop, skate, grunge: the decade that taught luxury to speak slang.
Low-rise, butterfly clips, frosted gloss. A decade that the algorithm will not let us forget.
One essay at the start of each month. No advertisements. No urgency. Enrol below and the next dispatch, unsealed, will arrive at your address.