Light, elegant women's cotton blouse in black with rounded hem. An obstinate creation that represents the union of elegance and comfort.
"Lay down your arms!" - This is the title of one of the most famous works by the Austrian peace researcher and writer Bertha von Suttner, who campaigned for pacifism and a peaceful society like no other. Not for nothing was the Viennese honored with the Nobel Peace Prize for it.
Our women's blouse "Suttner" is dedicated to the pacifist mission and stands out with a particularly soft and flowing material. The extravagant design convinces with minimalist but soft, subtle details such as a continuous concealed placket with finely crafted horn buttons.
Women who prefer an individual and avant-garde sense of design will also be pleased with the following stubborn features:
Three ocher stripes on the hem slit
Long sleeves with wide cuffs and three delicate horn buttons
Straight vertical and diagonal horizontal seam at the back, meeting in the middle
Small wave at the collar
In spring and summer, "Suttner" can be worn as a light blouse with elegant and slim cotton "Didion" trousers in blue. A more unconventional ensemble is created by loosely rolling up the sleeve cuffs and combining it with the trousers "Châtelet in black with the special "Dreyfus" tie. "Suttner" is also available in the color grey.
Brand: eigensinnig wien
Color: black
Material: 100% cotton
Fit: elegant-fluent
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.”