Loose-fitting and light women's short-sleeved shirt made of flowing-soft bamboo-cotton mix with refined details. Extravagant summeriness for freedom-loving individualists.
Anglo-Irish writer and philosopher Iris Murdoch was a thought leader in the gender debate-probably for autobiographical reasons, as she described herself as a person "in the skin of a homosexual man cheating on his wife."
We've dedicated our women's short-sleeved shirt from our in-house atelier to this great non-conformist thinker. It is cut wide, has a loose, round neckline and is incredibly comfortable to wear due to the material used - a flowing soft bamboo-cotton mix. Also inscribed in this obstinacy are some clever details that make it the extravagantly casual piece that it is:
On the front, you'll find a discreet side pocket that's happy to be filled with smartphone or other small items.
A straight, center seam is found on both sides. In each case, it leads into a slit that divides the top in a certain way into two halves, one of which is longer than the other: an allusion to the Japanese wabi-sabi concept, which locates true beauty in flaw, imperfection and asymmetry.
Combined with 'Feyerabend' trousers in black linen, 'Murdoch' becomes an extravagant, versatile ensemble - in part because the trousers' ties can be removed and worn as an unusual tie. The elegant, slim trousers 'Didion', on the other hand, ground the obstinacy by putting its extravagance into perspective in an unconventional way.
Brand: eigensinnig wien
Color: grey
Material: 68% bamboo, 28% cotton, 4% spandex
eigensinnig wien: special avant-garde fashion for men and women.
Under our avant-garde fashion label eigensinnig wien, we manufacture unique fashion pieces for obstinate characters. We design our collections in an experimental process, enriching them with thoughts and ideas from the fields of philosophy, art and literature or drawing inspiration from philosophy, art and literature. That is why our trousers and jackets, blouses and dresses bear the names of philosophers, literary figures and sociologists. We work with materials from nature, which we like to combine in asymmetrical, avant-garde cuts. Our aesthetic is based on the Japanese wabi-sabi concept: “Pare down to the essence, but don’t remove the poetry.”