MABE | Darla Floral Print Jacket - Cotton-Silk
The MABE Darla Jacket arrives with a quiet, painterly confidence, its silhouette defined by a free and easy fit that never once sacrifices structure for slouch. What first commands attention is the print: a soft, colourful floral border pattern that feels lifted from a well-loved archive of botanical illustrations, set against a cotton-silk ground that holds colour with a matte, almost powdery depth. This is not a print that shouts; it blooms across the fabric in measured, deliberate intervals, bordered by a graphic stripe that lends the whole piece a studied, almost architectural framing. The juxtaposition is immediate and intelligent—romantic content held in a rational, wearable form. The fabric itself is a study in deceptive weight. Cotton-silk has a particular hand: it is crisp enough to hold a shape, yet yields a fluid drape that skims the body without clinging. It breathes with the warmth of cotton but carries the subtle, cool slip of silk against the skin. The interior reveals a secondary narrative—a woven pinstripe cotton-silk lining that peeks out at the edges, a discreet counterpoint to the floral exterior. This lining is not merely functional; it is a deliberate design detail, a nod to the maison’s refusal to overlook the inside of a garment. The fabric feels substantial enough for a transitional season, yet light enough to be layered without bulk. Cut and construction follow the logic of ease. The Darla is built with gathered three-quarter sleeves that introduce a soft volume at the shoulder, tapering gently toward the wrist—a shape that suggests movement before it begins. The body is unlined in the traditional sense, relying instead on that pinstripe interior to maintain the jacket’s architecture. Side slip pockets are integrated cleanly, falling at a natural hip height, their placement as intuitive as the jacket’s overall silhouette. The seams are finished with precision, the kind of quiet quality that reveals itself only upon close inspection. This is a jacket that moves with the wearer, not against them. The generous cut allows for a full range of motion—arms lift, shoulders roll, the fabric shifts and resettles without pulling or gaping. It is a piece for the kind of day that demands both polish and physical freedom: a morning train, a long lunch, an afternoon gallery visit, an evening that stretches into dinner. Seasonally, it lands squarely in the limbo of late spring and early autumn, when the air is uncertain and a jacket must be both a layer and a statement. Style it over a simple white cotton dress for a study in contrast, or with wide-leg trousers and a silk shell for a more tailored proposition. The Darla does not demand a specific occasion; it creates its own.
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MABE | Darla Floral Print Jacket - Cotton-Silk
MABE | Darla Floral Print Jacket - Cotton-Silk
The MABE Darla Jacket arrives with a quiet, painterly confidence, its silhouette defined by a free and easy fit that never once sacrifices structure for slouch. What first commands attention is the print: a soft, colourful floral border pattern that feels lifted from a well-loved archive of botanical illustrations, set against a cotton-silk ground that holds colour with a matte, almost powdery depth. This is not a print that shouts; it blooms across the fabric in measured, deliberate intervals, bordered by a graphic stripe that lends the whole piece a studied, almost architectural framing. The juxtaposition is immediate and intelligent—romantic content held in a rational, wearable form. The fabric itself is a study in deceptive weight. Cotton-silk has a particular hand: it is crisp enough to hold a shape, yet yields a fluid drape that skims the body without clinging. It breathes with the warmth of cotton but carries the subtle, cool slip of silk against the skin. The interior reveals a secondary narrative—a woven pinstripe cotton-silk lining that peeks out at the edges, a discreet counterpoint to the floral exterior. This lining is not merely functional; it is a deliberate design detail, a nod to the maison’s refusal to overlook the inside of a garment. The fabric feels substantial enough for a transitional season, yet light enough to be layered without bulk. Cut and construction follow the logic of ease. The Darla is built with gathered three-quarter sleeves that introduce a soft volume at the shoulder, tapering gently toward the wrist—a shape that suggests movement before it begins. The body is unlined in the traditional sense, relying instead on that pinstripe interior to maintain the jacket’s architecture. Side slip pockets are integrated cleanly, falling at a natural hip height, their placement as intuitive as the jacket’s overall silhouette. The seams are finished with precision, the kind of quiet quality that reveals itself only upon close inspection. This is a jacket that moves with the wearer, not against them. The generous cut allows for a full range of motion—arms lift, shoulders roll, the fabric shifts and resettles without pulling or gaping. It is a piece for the kind of day that demands both polish and physical freedom: a morning train, a long lunch, an afternoon gallery visit, an evening that stretches into dinner. Seasonally, it lands squarely in the limbo of late spring and early autumn, when the air is uncertain and a jacket must be both a layer and a statement. Style it over a simple white cotton dress for a study in contrast, or with wide-leg trousers and a silk shell for a more tailored proposition. The Darla does not demand a specific occasion; it creates its own.
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
The MABE Darla Jacket arrives with a quiet, painterly confidence, its silhouette defined by a free and easy fit that never once sacrifices structure for slouch. What first commands attention is the print: a soft, colourful floral border pattern that feels lifted from a well-loved archive of botanical illustrations, set against a cotton-silk ground that holds colour with a matte, almost powdery depth. This is not a print that shouts; it blooms across the fabric in measured, deliberate intervals, bordered by a graphic stripe that lends the whole piece a studied, almost architectural framing. The juxtaposition is immediate and intelligent—romantic content held in a rational, wearable form. The fabric itself is a study in deceptive weight. Cotton-silk has a particular hand: it is crisp enough to hold a shape, yet yields a fluid drape that skims the body without clinging. It breathes with the warmth of cotton but carries the subtle, cool slip of silk against the skin. The interior reveals a secondary narrative—a woven pinstripe cotton-silk lining that peeks out at the edges, a discreet counterpoint to the floral exterior. This lining is not merely functional; it is a deliberate design detail, a nod to the maison’s refusal to overlook the inside of a garment. The fabric feels substantial enough for a transitional season, yet light enough to be layered without bulk. Cut and construction follow the logic of ease. The Darla is built with gathered three-quarter sleeves that introduce a soft volume at the shoulder, tapering gently toward the wrist—a shape that suggests movement before it begins. The body is unlined in the traditional sense, relying instead on that pinstripe interior to maintain the jacket’s architecture. Side slip pockets are integrated cleanly, falling at a natural hip height, their placement as intuitive as the jacket’s overall silhouette. The seams are finished with precision, the kind of quiet quality that reveals itself only upon close inspection. This is a jacket that moves with the wearer, not against them. The generous cut allows for a full range of motion—arms lift, shoulders roll, the fabric shifts and resettles without pulling or gaping. It is a piece for the kind of day that demands both polish and physical freedom: a morning train, a long lunch, an afternoon gallery visit, an evening that stretches into dinner. Seasonally, it lands squarely in the limbo of late spring and early autumn, when the air is uncertain and a jacket must be both a layer and a statement. Style it over a simple white cotton dress for a study in contrast, or with wide-leg trousers and a silk shell for a more tailored proposition. The Darla does not demand a specific occasion; it creates its own.



















