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The Borrowed Suit: When Women's Wear Dares to Be Genderless



There's a certain swagger that comes with a suit. A confidence. An air of, dare I say, power. For decades, it's been a uniform, a shield almost, largely associated with men. But something's shifting. The lines are blurring, and honestly? It's about damn time.


I remember my first real suit. Not some pastel concoction from the ladies' section, all peplum and awkward length. No, this was different. A vintage YSL number, charcoal grey, sharp shoulders that could cut glass, trousers that whispered "I mean business." Found it tucked away in a Marais vintage shop, a relic from a time when Saint Laurent himself was redefining what women could wear, could be.


Slipping into it was transformative. The world looked different. I felt different. Powerful, yes, but also strangely liberated. Like I could conquer boardrooms and break hearts all in the same breath. It wasn't about masculinity, not really. It was about owning a certain energy, an attitude that transcended the tired old binary.


And that's what's so exciting about what we're seeing now. Not just women in suits, but women in suits that challenge the very notion of what "women's wear" even means. The oversized silhouettes at Balenciaga, all sharp angles and dramatic volume, swallowing the body whole. The playful subversion of tailoring at Comme des Garçons, where a jacket might be half-deconstructed, the seams exposed, a wink to the artifice of it all. The quiet luxury of The Row, where a perfectly cut trouser suit in the finest cashmere whispers rather than shouts its power.


It's not just about the big names, though. Walk down any street, and you'll see it. Young women in vintage finds, mixing and matching, creating their own language of power dressing. A thrifted blazer thrown over a slip dress. Wide-leg trousers paired with a cropped tee and chunky sneakers. It's a glorious mishmash, a rejection of prescribed norms, a celebration of individuality.


And let's not forget the impact. Because when women dare to borrow from the boys, it forces a conversation. It disrupts the status quo. It makes people uncomfortable, and sometimes, that's exactly what we need. It challenges the very idea of what's "masculine" and "feminine," revealing these categories for the constructs they are.


Of course, there will always be those who cling to the old rules. Who see a woman in a suit and reach for their outdated dictionaries of style. But they're missing the point. This isn't about androgyny for androgyny's sake. It's not about erasing femininity. It's about expanding the possibilities. About giving women the freedom to choose how they want to present themselves, to express their strength and individuality on their own terms.


The suit, in its borrowed glory, becomes a symbol of this freedom. A rejection of limitations. A declaration of self-possession. And that, my friends, is a beautiful thing.


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