Lollys Laundry | Oversize Wool-Blend Blazer in Grey
The jacket arrives with a deliberate lack of ceremony. It is an oversize blazer, but one that understands the difference between volume and slouch. The silhouette is architectural yet soft—broad in the shoulder without being rigid, the lapel rolling with a confidence that suggests it has been cut, not merely sewn. This is the Antonellall Shor in Grey, a piece that stakes its claim on proportion: a generous, almost menswear-inspired frame that sits lightly on the body, never swamping it. The line is clean, the intent clear. This is not a blazer that follows; it leads. The hand of the fabric is where the story deepens. A blend of 70% polyester and 30% wool, the cloth strikes a rare balance between structure and give. It is warm without weight, crisp without stiffness. The wool lends a matte, almost dusty finish to the grey—a shade that reads as urban, elemental, like the underside of a cloud over the Seine. The polyester content ensures the jacket holds its shape through a day of movement, resisting the creases that lesser wools would surrender to. When you run a hand down the sleeve, the surface is smooth, slightly napped, with a subtle resistance that speaks of durability and considered construction. Cut and construction follow the logic of the fabric. The shoulders are lightly padded, giving the jacket its characteristic breadth without a hint of armor. The sleeve head is set with precision, allowing the arm to swing freely within the generous circumference. The double-breasted front is buttoned low, drawing the eye downward and elongating the torso. Internal seams are finished cleanly, the lining sliding against wool with a whisper. This is a garment built for movement, not for standing still. In motion, the jacket reveals its intelligence. The fabric drapes in soft, unbroken panels, falling away from the body as you walk. There is a fluidity to the back that counters the sharpness of the front—a subtle tension between the structured lapel and the flowing hem. It works across seasons with ease: layered over a thin cashmere turtleneck in the depths of winter, or thrown open over bare skin for the first cool evenings of spring. The grey is a neutral that refuses to be neutral—it holds its own against black, against cream, against the raw indigo of a new pair of jeans. Style it as you would a second skin. Pull it over a silk slip dress and leather boots for a dinner that demands attention without effort. Pair it with wide-leg trousers in a matching grey for a monochrome statement that needs no accessories. Or, for the truest expression of its character, wear it with nothing but a fine-gauge knit and raw denim—letting the jacket do all the talking. It is a piece that rewards those who understand that confidence is not worn, but inhabited.
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns





Lollys Laundry | Oversize Wool-Blend Blazer in Grey
Lollys Laundry | Oversize Wool-Blend Blazer in Grey
The jacket arrives with a deliberate lack of ceremony. It is an oversize blazer, but one that understands the difference between volume and slouch. The silhouette is architectural yet soft—broad in the shoulder without being rigid, the lapel rolling with a confidence that suggests it has been cut, not merely sewn. This is the Antonellall Shor in Grey, a piece that stakes its claim on proportion: a generous, almost menswear-inspired frame that sits lightly on the body, never swamping it. The line is clean, the intent clear. This is not a blazer that follows; it leads. The hand of the fabric is where the story deepens. A blend of 70% polyester and 30% wool, the cloth strikes a rare balance between structure and give. It is warm without weight, crisp without stiffness. The wool lends a matte, almost dusty finish to the grey—a shade that reads as urban, elemental, like the underside of a cloud over the Seine. The polyester content ensures the jacket holds its shape through a day of movement, resisting the creases that lesser wools would surrender to. When you run a hand down the sleeve, the surface is smooth, slightly napped, with a subtle resistance that speaks of durability and considered construction. Cut and construction follow the logic of the fabric. The shoulders are lightly padded, giving the jacket its characteristic breadth without a hint of armor. The sleeve head is set with precision, allowing the arm to swing freely within the generous circumference. The double-breasted front is buttoned low, drawing the eye downward and elongating the torso. Internal seams are finished cleanly, the lining sliding against wool with a whisper. This is a garment built for movement, not for standing still. In motion, the jacket reveals its intelligence. The fabric drapes in soft, unbroken panels, falling away from the body as you walk. There is a fluidity to the back that counters the sharpness of the front—a subtle tension between the structured lapel and the flowing hem. It works across seasons with ease: layered over a thin cashmere turtleneck in the depths of winter, or thrown open over bare skin for the first cool evenings of spring. The grey is a neutral that refuses to be neutral—it holds its own against black, against cream, against the raw indigo of a new pair of jeans. Style it as you would a second skin. Pull it over a silk slip dress and leather boots for a dinner that demands attention without effort. Pair it with wide-leg trousers in a matching grey for a monochrome statement that needs no accessories. Or, for the truest expression of its character, wear it with nothing but a fine-gauge knit and raw denim—letting the jacket do all the talking. It is a piece that rewards those who understand that confidence is not worn, but inhabited.
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
The jacket arrives with a deliberate lack of ceremony. It is an oversize blazer, but one that understands the difference between volume and slouch. The silhouette is architectural yet soft—broad in the shoulder without being rigid, the lapel rolling with a confidence that suggests it has been cut, not merely sewn. This is the Antonellall Shor in Grey, a piece that stakes its claim on proportion: a generous, almost menswear-inspired frame that sits lightly on the body, never swamping it. The line is clean, the intent clear. This is not a blazer that follows; it leads. The hand of the fabric is where the story deepens. A blend of 70% polyester and 30% wool, the cloth strikes a rare balance between structure and give. It is warm without weight, crisp without stiffness. The wool lends a matte, almost dusty finish to the grey—a shade that reads as urban, elemental, like the underside of a cloud over the Seine. The polyester content ensures the jacket holds its shape through a day of movement, resisting the creases that lesser wools would surrender to. When you run a hand down the sleeve, the surface is smooth, slightly napped, with a subtle resistance that speaks of durability and considered construction. Cut and construction follow the logic of the fabric. The shoulders are lightly padded, giving the jacket its characteristic breadth without a hint of armor. The sleeve head is set with precision, allowing the arm to swing freely within the generous circumference. The double-breasted front is buttoned low, drawing the eye downward and elongating the torso. Internal seams are finished cleanly, the lining sliding against wool with a whisper. This is a garment built for movement, not for standing still. In motion, the jacket reveals its intelligence. The fabric drapes in soft, unbroken panels, falling away from the body as you walk. There is a fluidity to the back that counters the sharpness of the front—a subtle tension between the structured lapel and the flowing hem. It works across seasons with ease: layered over a thin cashmere turtleneck in the depths of winter, or thrown open over bare skin for the first cool evenings of spring. The grey is a neutral that refuses to be neutral—it holds its own against black, against cream, against the raw indigo of a new pair of jeans. Style it as you would a second skin. Pull it over a silk slip dress and leather boots for a dinner that demands attention without effort. Pair it with wide-leg trousers in a matching grey for a monochrome statement that needs no accessories. Or, for the truest expression of its character, wear it with nothing but a fine-gauge knit and raw denim—letting the jacket do all the talking. It is a piece that rewards those who understand that confidence is not worn, but inhabited.





















