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CACAO BISOUS | Oversized Denim Jacket 2009 - Black

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CACAO BISOUS | Oversized Denim Jacket 2009 - Black

CACAO BISOUS | Oversized Denim Jacket 2009 - Black

A block of black denim, almost architectural in its refusal to conform. Cacao Bisous’s 2009 Oversized Denim Jacket is not a reissue; it is a proposition. It dismantles the workwear archetype, rebuilding it as a sculptural, oversized box that stands like architectural armor on the body. The silhouette is the defining gesture—a deliberate, slouchy volume that swallows the frame without looking borrowed. It is a study in proportion, where the shoulder drops and the hem hovers just below the hip, creating a rigid, almost cubic outline that feels both protective and provocative. This is not a jacket to be worn; it is a jacket to be inhabited. The fabric is the anchor. Cut from a dense, rigid cotton denim with substantial weight, the black wash reads near-solid, a deep, moody monochrome that allows the weave’s subtle grain to command attention. There is no stretch, no give—only the honest, uncompromising hand of raw denim. The surface is a quiet theater of texture: raw-edge seams trace the construction like deliberate scars, while the deep indigo-black finish absorbs light rather than reflecting it. The material feels heavy, grounding, and unapologetically structural. It is the kind of denim that will crease and mold to your body over time, marking your movements like a memory. The construction is deliberate, almost obsessive. The oversized fit is not an accident but a calculation: the boxy cut allows for layering without bulk, while the dropped shoulders and extended sleeves create a languid, slouchy drape that contrasts the fabric’s rigidity. There is a tension here—between the hard, architectural shell and the soft, unbuttoned ease of wearing it open. The jacket stands on its own, a piece of wearable sculpture that holds its shape even when empty. Every seam, every raw edge, every button placement is a decision, reinforcing the garment’s status as a considered object rather than a casual throw-on. Movement is paradoxical. The jacket is stiff, yet it swings with a certain weight when unbuttoned, the fabric catching air and creating a silhouette that shifts with the body. It is a piece for the transitional season—the kind of outerwear that works in the cool of a spring evening or the first chill of autumn. Style it unbuttoned over a liquid silk slip dress, letting the masculine volume fracture against a slick, feminine undercurrent. Or layer it over a fine-gauge cashmere turtleneck and tailored trousers, the black-on-black creating a monochromatic study in texture. This is not about occasion; it is about attitude. A concrete styling note: wear it open, with nothing underneath but a whisper of silk, and let the jacket do all the talking.

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From $22.40

Original: $64.00

-65%
CACAO BISOUS | Oversized Denim Jacket 2009 - Black

$64.00

$22.40

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Description

A block of black denim, almost architectural in its refusal to conform. Cacao Bisous’s 2009 Oversized Denim Jacket is not a reissue; it is a proposition. It dismantles the workwear archetype, rebuilding it as a sculptural, oversized box that stands like architectural armor on the body. The silhouette is the defining gesture—a deliberate, slouchy volume that swallows the frame without looking borrowed. It is a study in proportion, where the shoulder drops and the hem hovers just below the hip, creating a rigid, almost cubic outline that feels both protective and provocative. This is not a jacket to be worn; it is a jacket to be inhabited. The fabric is the anchor. Cut from a dense, rigid cotton denim with substantial weight, the black wash reads near-solid, a deep, moody monochrome that allows the weave’s subtle grain to command attention. There is no stretch, no give—only the honest, uncompromising hand of raw denim. The surface is a quiet theater of texture: raw-edge seams trace the construction like deliberate scars, while the deep indigo-black finish absorbs light rather than reflecting it. The material feels heavy, grounding, and unapologetically structural. It is the kind of denim that will crease and mold to your body over time, marking your movements like a memory. The construction is deliberate, almost obsessive. The oversized fit is not an accident but a calculation: the boxy cut allows for layering without bulk, while the dropped shoulders and extended sleeves create a languid, slouchy drape that contrasts the fabric’s rigidity. There is a tension here—between the hard, architectural shell and the soft, unbuttoned ease of wearing it open. The jacket stands on its own, a piece of wearable sculpture that holds its shape even when empty. Every seam, every raw edge, every button placement is a decision, reinforcing the garment’s status as a considered object rather than a casual throw-on. Movement is paradoxical. The jacket is stiff, yet it swings with a certain weight when unbuttoned, the fabric catching air and creating a silhouette that shifts with the body. It is a piece for the transitional season—the kind of outerwear that works in the cool of a spring evening or the first chill of autumn. Style it unbuttoned over a liquid silk slip dress, letting the masculine volume fracture against a slick, feminine undercurrent. Or layer it over a fine-gauge cashmere turtleneck and tailored trousers, the black-on-black creating a monochromatic study in texture. This is not about occasion; it is about attitude. A concrete styling note: wear it open, with nothing underneath but a whisper of silk, and let the jacket do all the talking.