
Guide
Extra-wide trousers, striped shirts and branded beanies: spring fashion inspo
by Laura Scholz
To style a blouse more casually, we usually do up the bottom buttons and leave it unbottoned at the top. Here’s why you should try it the other way around.
Last week was New York Fashion Week. Looking at the show-goers, one of the dominant looks was a particular way of wearing a blouse: done up at the top, unbuttoned at the bottom and draped loosely over the body. Worn this way, the undone buttons form a triangular shape that exposes the navel.
The half-buttoned shirt looks refreshingly informal and makes the fabric flow particularly dynamically. It adapts to your movements, flaps in the breeze and shows off the remnants of your summer suntan. As a result, it playfully switches between revealing and covering your navel.
Depending on what you prefer, you can either leave the shirt collar open (adding to the casual charm) or button it up to the top (creating an interesting mix of styles). However, to make the effect noticeable, don’t do up any more than three buttons.
This style makes oversized blouses in particular look more flattering. The triangle-shaped opening exposes the stomach and hips, creating a more figure-hugging silhouette. It’s also a great way of wearing longer shirts that can’t be neatly tucked into your trousers.
If you like wearing crop tops, leaving your shirt unbuttoned at the bottom is a great way to carry the exposed-navel look into autumn. If, however, you prefer covering up, you could also wear a vest or printed mesh top underneath to create an interesting layered look.
Whether you’re bearing all or layering up, leaving your blouse half-buttoned is an on-trend styling technique that’ll make your look dynamic and exciting. Not only that, but it brings a breath of fresh air to your wardrobe – especially now we’re in that in-between season, when we’re more likely to wear shirts.
Header image: SpotlightHas endless love for shoulder pads, Stratocasters and sashimi, but a limited tolerance for bad impressions of her Eastern Swiss dialect.