Suit of the Week: Burberry

This post may contain affiliate links and Corporette® may earn commissions for purchases made through links in this post. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

For busy working women, the suit is often the easiest outfit to throw on in the morning. In general, this feature is not about interview suits for women, which should be as classic and basic as you get — instead, this feature is about the slightly different suit that is fashionable, yet professional.

Burberry is doing some… interesting things with suits lately. I'm not sure I'm a fan of all of them, but they're… definitely interesting! (Look at you go, Burberry!) I love the blazer here, although I'm less sure about the pants — but let's get to the blazer first.

If you can't see it, this is a wool suit with ribbed knit inserts along the side. I love this for the blazer — it kind of reminds me of the collared James Perse shirts that were super popular a few years ago, where the ribbed knit sides meant that they basically stretched as much as you wanted and were perfectly oversized while still being fitted. (I'm actually kind of excited they're still around; they disappeared for a while!) I'm also, as always, a sucker for an interesting mix of textures.

The pants I'm less of a fan of — the rib knit down the sides feels too big (it would be so cool if it were like a tuxedo stripe instead of half the model's thigh) and they have the weird front-slit trend happening which, well, if it just goes away entirely by the time we come out of these strange days I can't say I'd miss it.

In any event: huzzah to the blazer; meh to the pants. The blazer is $1,990; the pants are $1,320.

Sales of note for 1/31/25:

  • Ann Taylor – Suiting Event – 30% off suiting + 30% off tops
  • Nordstrom – Cashmere on sale; AllSaints, Free People, Nike, Tory Burch, and Vince up to 60%; beauty deals up to 25% off
  • Banana Republic Factory – 50% off everything + extra 20 off your $100+ purchase
  • Boden – 15% off new season styles
  • Eloquii – 60% off 100s of styles
  • J.Crew – Up to 40% off winter layers
  • J.Crew Factory – 50% off sweaters and pants
  • Rothy's – Final Few: Up to 40% off last-chance styles
  • Spanx – Lots of workwear on sale, some up to 70% off
  • Talbots – End of season clearance, extra 70% off markdown tops + extra 60% off all other markdowns

Sales of note for 1/31/25:

  • Ann Taylor – Suiting Event – 30% off suiting + 30% off tops
  • Nordstrom – Cashmere on sale; AllSaints, Free People, Nike, Tory Burch, and Vince up to 60%; beauty deals up to 25% off
  • Banana Republic Factory – 50% off everything + extra 20 off your $100+ purchase
  • Boden – 15% off new season styles
  • Eloquii – 60% off 100s of styles
  • J.Crew – Up to 40% off winter layers
  • J.Crew Factory – 50% off sweaters and pants
  • Rothy's – Final Few: Up to 40% off last-chance styles
  • Spanx – Lots of workwear on sale, some up to 70% off
  • Talbots – End of season clearance, extra 70% off markdown tops + extra 60% off all other markdowns

And some of our latest threadjacks here at Corporette (reader questions and commentary) — see more here!

Some of our latest threadjacks include:

104 Comments

  1. Advice for how to handle this or tell me I’m being too paranoid? I’m going through the process of finding a new personal accountant, and some of them have asked me to send them my prior tax return before our first meeting. Should I be redacting my information in any way? They’re legitimate firms, I’m not worried about that, but I don’t know anything about their data retention policies yet. Too paranoid?

    1. I’d say yes, too paranoid, if you’re confident that they’re legitimate firms. That said, there’s no reason you can’t redact your SSN if you’re worried.

    2. I’d just make a note to follow up with each firm you don’t contract and ask them to shred your data if needed.

    3. My accountant (new to me this year) asked me to upload prior tax returns to a secure site. I felt like it was a reasonable, and reasonably secure, request. And FYI I have had identity theft up to and including the perpetrator going to federal prison.

    4. I prefer to redact my SSN in as many situations as possible. They don’t need it until you are a client.

  2. Last January, I was selected to speak at an industry conference that’s a very big deal in my field, after being nominated by my boss. The conference was set to happen in the fall, but due to poor planning/unrealistic optimism on the COVID front, the entire event had to be cancelled at the last minute. I don’t suppose it’s appropriate to note on my LinkedIn/resume that I was chosen as a speaker and prepared a presentation for a conference that never occurred?

    1. I think you could note that you were selected as a speaker, with the caveat “conference canceled due to pandemic.” I’d just leave off the part about preparing a presentation. Will you get to speak again, or is too soon to know that?

    2. I think it’s odd to include. Any chance they’ll have you speak going forward or would be open to turning your presentation into an article or webinar? (I speak pretty regularly and am involved in my own organization’s education, and that’s my experience in how it has been handled for the few that couldn’t go virtual.)

    3. Thanks everyone! I won’t be able to present at the 2021 conference (just found out, which is what prompted this question today) but fingers crossed for 2022 or at least one of the smaller field- or region- specific events.

      1. I wouldn’t put it on your resume or Linkedin but this is the kind of thing you could casually mention in an interview (when they ask how the pandemic has been treating you, etc)

    4. Super late response so IDK if you’ll see it, but you could re-purpose the content to share with your network and note that it was originally prepared for Fancy Conference. Does the conference curate a recap or blog about the content? You might see if you can submit an article with the content to a conference-related publication instead, and that way you can share it on LI with a, “Conference was cancelled due to covid, but I was able to share Topic with Outlet” note so you still get your expertise out into the world.

    1. YES! I was completely amazed and stunned in such a great way listening to her today. And she’s just 22!

  3. I’ve started using dark eyeshadow as eyeliner because I like the softness compared to a pencil liner. (It’s a good Zoom look for me!) Unfortunately, it’s also smudging/smearing on the outer corner of my eye during the day, which is not a great look. What’s the solution? Better eyelid primer? Setting it differently?

    1. Would a gel liner work? You can also use a liner brush to apply soft pencil liner (run the pencil over the brush and then apply) … but that may still be smudgy.

    2. Spray a setting spray on your makeup brush after dipping it in the shadow. Mac’s Fix+ is good for this.

    3. Use a liquid meant to convert powder to liner. NYX makes one.

      Eye creams also make eye makeup run so you might want to tone that down.

      Last, I like shadow primers like urban decay.

    4. I mix eyeshadow with a drop of liquid from a bottle of eye drops. Maybe try that if you have some around?

  4. I am not yet 40, with a net worth of $3.5M after too many years of working as an SDE for Big Tech. I am bone tired. The stress of the pandemic has put me over the edge.

    I am single but I am caregiver for a highly disabled elderly parent. Someone in my network recently suggested to me that I could just be done now. I would probably need to move to a lower COL area. But my parent is so tied into our scene here – doctors, friends, etc. – that I feel stuck. Moving would be too disruptive to my parent. They might live 6 months or 10+ years.

    What would you ladies do in my situation? A big part of me says that I have to keep working until Parent passes, bc I need to support us in our VHCOL area. OTOH, if Parent is going to pass sooner then retiring now will give me more quality time to spend with them.

    1. As someone who will never see a million dollars in her lifetime, my first response would be to go live on an island somewhere and have attractive men bring me drinks and never work again for the rest of my life.

      I’m sure other, more responsible people who are more familiar with things like the stock market will have a better answer.

    2. This is hard. In your shoes I would look for a lower stress, lower paying job and stay in your VHCOL for a few more years. This assumes you could break even on a lower salary (so minimize expenses/not really have extra savings), but you already have a significant nest egg accumulated. If parent passes, you could then relocate/take another job/start saving, etc.

      I would also consider moving a few hours outside your VHCOL area to somewhere with a lower COL, and spending a few weekends a month with parent caring for their needs. This option obviously depends on how much care your parent needs, whether you can support them remotely, etc.

      This is tough. You sound like a great daughter and are clearly very responsible in that you set yourself up to have options.

    3. So I read alot of early retirement forums (FIRE) and here’s my opinion based on that.

      You can 1000% retire right this second. Your money should theoretically last forever with a 4% withdrawal rate, but a 3.5% is considered very very conservative. Assuming all of that $3.5 milll is invested, that gives you $122,500 a year before taxes. If some of that is invested in your home, adjust accordingly. I live in NYC on significantly less than that, so unless you have a very extravagant lifestyle, that should be more than enough in any area. You do not have to move, though of course you can if you want and your money would go further.

      Early retirement doesn’t have to be forever. You can retire now, take care of your parent, rest, rediscover hobbies. If in 3 years your parent has passed and you’re itching to go back to work, you can do so on your own terms — not because you need the income but because it’s something you want to do.

      The only wrinkle is that you have to figure out health insurance. This is not to say it’s impossible, but something you should carefully research and budget for.

      In your shoes, I would submit my resignation letter before 5pm today. Life is too short to be bone tired when you don’t have to be.

      1. I read a lot of FIRE forums and blogs as well. Retire right this second. This is what all that money is for. The Mr. Money Mustache forum has a Post-FIRE subforum for early retirees; look there for information about your health insurance options. You can also post a detailed “case study” for additional input from people who live to crunch numbers.

        I live significantly below my means because I value my freedom more than things. The decisions you have the freedom to make with significant assets are so much more than when you are living paycheck to paycheck. You have put in the work. Now, do what you want and need. If my mom or MIL needed serious care, I would put in my notice immediately. Caring for them when the time comes is very important for me; this is what all this wealth is for.

        Decide where you want to live after you’ve been off the grind for a while. Do you and your parent value your HCOL area now that your career isn’t depending on it? You may live in your current area for a few years, then go to a LCOL area later. You may realize you love your HCOL area, and decide to freelance or work partime to fund your expenses while your nest egg grows. You have a million choices before you. Take a breath, then figure out what you want to do.

        1. Agreed with this 100%. I also didn’t realize in my first post that you are a SDE — you can *easily* get 10-20 hours a week of highly paid freelance/consulting work if in 6 months you decide you feel like doing that — or you could not! Seriously, get off this site and start researching the health insurance thing right now and resign by the end of this week.

        2. Exactly this. Quit now and see how it goes. If you decide you want/need to move to a LCOL area and work some later you can, but you have enough money to stay where you are for a little while and spend this time with your parent while they’re still here.

        3. Why should she just retire? She is only 40 and has alot of years left. With this kind of money on her personal resume, she could easily attract a man willing to live with her and help her and her aging parents, knowing that he can be in for a payoff if he keeps her happy. I think if she can find a guy willing to care for her and her parents, and provide her with the stimulation that she needs, it would be a win win for both of them. She would have a guy to be with her (and her parents for their tenure), and he would have the security of being with a woman with alot of money in the bank who would be abel to get both of them through hard times, if any.

      2. Aren’t all those FIRE people going to be SOL when the overheated stock market corrects itself, though?

        1. There’s one guy I’ve seen on forums who has 80% of his NW in Tesla. That’s not going to go well unless he gets out ASAP. But if you have normally diversified investments (i.e. index funds), the math says no, that you will ride it out. I don’t have a citation readily available but there have been several mathematical/historical analyses (published in peer reviewed economic journals) that conclude that with a 4% withdrawal rate the portfolio will bounce back through any stock market ups and downs.

          I personally lived through the collapse of the Soviet Union and the staggering inflation that followed, so yeah it’s possible, but if the situation is that dire, everyone will be SOL. In Russia in the early 90s, most people’s salaries dropped to effectively 0 because they were not adjusted to inflation fast enough (the indexes move sharply every day and people were customarily paid once a month…most people stopped showing up to work except on pay day, people took turns signing everyone in for the day) — so whether you just effectively lost your entire bank account or your salary, you were just as screwed as everyone else. It is my opinion that until we are all obliterated by nuclear war or flooded/burned/suffocated due to global warming, a 4% withdrawal rate on a portfolio invested in index funds is safe. Your risk level may, of course, vary.

    4. You’re a perfect candidate for a financial advisor! They can tell you what the projections are if you invest part/all of your net worth. They’ll also be able to tell you if you need to keep working – and the answer might be keep working but part time or something less stressful/well paying. FWIW, if I had your net worth at 40, I would not be done because I know my financial projections require more, and I’m in a MCOL area.

    5. OMG – Retire/ take a break to be with your parent. You are such a blessing to them.

    6. Retire. Move to lower cost of living area. It will be some work to organized medical care but if you’re an hour or so to a mid-sized city then it shouldn’t be an issue.

      If you come across unexpected expenses later in life, you can always work more. Either something in your current or related field or something entirely different. My BFF’s mom started teaching running clinic in her 50s after a fairly sedentary life. She has enough for a basic retirement and teaching running clinics is her ‘fun money’. My yoga teacher teaches at our gym once a week in exchange for a free membership.

    7. first of all you are a saint and your parent is very lucky to have you – that being said, your whole life should not be based on just living where your parent wants to live. do you like living in your VHCOL area? where are your friends? where would you want to live? do you like working/would you want to work in a less stressful capacity? is there any way to take a leave of absence from your current job, go on a reduced schedule or use FMLA to at least get a break and then reevaluate?

    8. It sounds like you are thinking of this as a forever decision, but it doesn’t need to be that. Maybe you take a year off, your parent is still alive, the pandemic is over, you’ve rested and taken care of yourself, and you feel super ready to get back out there. Maybe you feel ready to do something, but don’t want it to be a full time so you find some contract work. Maybe you taste freedom and you never want to work again so you move yourself and your parent to a LCOL area. Who knows? But it sounds like you need a break and have the resources to take one.

    9. Can you take a sabbatical and give youself a break from the edge before you decide?

      1. Yes, this. I’m seeing TONS of leaves of absences in big tech right now. Take six months and re-evaluate.

    10. I’m on team “Take a Sabbatical” and take some time to reassess. Also, if you are caring for a relative, you may qualify for a variety of protected leaves. The FFCRA had some leave provisions (may have expired partially), San Francisco has paid protected leave (short term) to take care of a family member, you could take FMLA. And your own employer might let you go on an unpaid leave if you need time post-FMLA to address your parent’s care needs.

      Separately, perhaps you are burned out because you are doing so much caregiving? If you feel corona-comfortable, perhaps considering hiring a home health aide to assist with more of the caregiving duties. From afar (I was off at college), I watched my mother care first for her mother and then for her dying sister. It really took a lot out of her over the years–she was exhausted between all of that and work! You are right to recognize that you are exhausted, but maybe it’s not the right time yet to retire.

      Also–is there a role you could pivot to that is a little less taxing perhaps? More management and less production? There’s a lot between retire and stay in your current job. Think bigger!!!

    11. I would keep working and hire caregivers and a cleaning service. This would allow you to focus your time with your parent on just being together rather than meeting the parent’s physical needs. As your parent’s condition deteriorates, the physical labor will become more taxing and he/she may become resistant and combative. Your own quality of life will be much greater if you are not the primary physical caregiver.

      Source: My family’s experience

    12. This is a perfect example of society’s double standards. No man would ever consider giving up his job to care for an aging parent. He’d hire someone to do the caregiving, leave it to his sisters, or let his parent figure it out for themself.

      1. I don’t agree, I commented above that OP should retire and honestly the caregiving wasn’t really a huge part of my calculus. OP is burned out and has the means to take a long term or permanent break from working for money. Whether she takes care of her parent or takes up pottery in her newly free time is up to her. If the parent were not part of the equation my advice would be the same, though I would perhaps have spent less time reassuring OP that she has enough money in her VHCOL area, because she’s of course right that the same amount would go further in a M/LCOL area.

      2. I know caregiving men, actually. And there are plenty of people, male and female, who stop working when they don’t need to financially anymore.

        1. One of my best friends took three years off from his career when his mom died unexpectedly and he had to care for his dad, who had been in an downward spiral with his health even before his mom passed. He went back to work after his dad died and had to explain to people that he had taken a caregiving leave, and believe me, he got static for it.

          Some of the blanket statements made here about men are getting a little extreme, and also display a lack of both common sense and good judgement on the part of the commenter.

          1. Very late but I second this. My father left his job and moved back to his home town (at a significant pay cut and a much less prestigious job) to care for his grandmother who raised him. I know at least two other men who quit jobs or took a huge step back to be caregivers. (One to a parent and the other to a disabled child.) Men can and do.

            And being more like men is not something I aspire to.

    13. I’m in a very similar situation, for a similar reason. Not pulling the trigger yet, but it’s in the back of my mind.

    14. Thank you all so much for this advice. Based on this, I am going to figure out my exit this calendar year (!). I have a high 5-figure bonus in June that I should collect. Maybe re-fi my home while rates are super low and I have the steady paychecks. But it feels fab to have a direction!

      Parent lives with me btw. I pulled them out of their facility when the pandemic hit. They are not allowed to take the COVID vaccine per their doctors so we are in for a long, long haul with no outside help on the horizon:(

      1. That sounds like a great plan and you are a great daughter. Let us know how things go. Best of luck!

      2. That sounds really hard! You’re a wonderful child to your parent, and I hope this move gives you back enough time and sanity that you can take care of your parent AND live your life, too. Best of luck, and please post an update this summer!

      3. No advice, but BIG HUGS. Is there such a thing as a live-in au pair who cares for an elderly person? Like a live in nurse who will follow your guidelines for Covid safety 24/7 in exchange for room and board in a VHCOL place? I bet there are folks (doing online school for instance) who would be willing to do this work.

      4. I would spend some time to figure out what brings you joy/happiness first. I get a lot of satisfaction from work. So a part time role with benefits would be a better change for me in your situation than fully retiring. That would give me some work and some income to enable me to throw money at things I don’t want to do without worrying about it too much.

  5. Help me pick my next car?

    I’m (unexpectedly) in the market and have literally no idea where to begin. Things I need/want:
    -All wheel drive (icy rural roads yay whee!)
    -Second row bench seat
    -Enough room behind the second row to fit a dog crate without putting second row seats down, if that exists (I’ll get my measuring tape out eventually, but want to know what cars you’ve been able to haul anything and everything in)
    -Heated seats – not a must, but I would never, ever kick them out of bed.

    1. Honda CR-V? I’m not sure about the dog crate so you’ll want to check. Other than that it’s been great for us.

    2. We have a Hyundai Santa Fe and it fits your requirements. Ours is a 2015 but the area behind the second row of seats fits a pretty large dog crate easily, we don’t have to put the seats down. We don’t have the trim package that includes heated seats but I know you can get that if you want it.

      1. Hahaha from the PNW here +1ing that everyone loves a good Subaru. But they don’t have good hybrid options yet.

    3. I love love love my Ford Explorer. It sounds crazy to say out loud, because the ’90s Explorers come to mind immediately ha, but it’s the best selling SUV in America for a reason. It drives like a car but has tons of room (dog crate, check) and has a million nice features. I’m especially fond of the heated steering wheel.

      And it’s UNION MADE. I love seeing that union sticker on the windshield.

    4. We’ve been super happy with our Mazda CX-5. In 7 years, we haven’t had to repair a single thing (though admittedly, we don’t drive a ton).

      1. I just bought a Mazda CX-5 AWD (GT with PP) and have heated and air conditioned seats. Plus, I feel like it is a very refined ride – found it by accident by renting one. My other cars considered Toyota RAV4 (serious contender), Subaru Outback, and lightly, VW Tiguan and Lexus compact SUV and Honda CR-V.

        I love it. I have dark blue with creme leather interior. All my previous cars were pretty rugged so this was a step in the refined direction 34 OTD (3K taxes) — RAV slightly less but I think they have better value on Hybrids.

    5. I have a VW Tiguan (2020) and it has everything you’re mentioning if you just mean backseat plus crate. If you mean backseat plus third row plus crate, that would be tight. I have 3 rows in my Tiguan. If you want a bigger size, try the Atlas.

      I really, really love the infotainment/LCD display in my VW, and I have heated (front) seats.

      If you want a honking giant SUV, the Honda Pilot is the bees knees. The Tiguan fits my “needs to park in the City” lifestyle better. Oh, and zero percent financing, so I didn’t feel quite as guilty buying a new car.

      I LOVE MY TIGUAN.

    6. We love our Toyota RAV-4 hybrid. It fits a dishwasher in the back with the 2nd row bench seat up. I assume a dog crate is around that size.

      Also don’t ask WHY I was toting a dishwasher around in the back of my car.

      1. All of these suggestions are great, thank you everyone. But oh man, Curious, never has there been a better or more hilarious endorsement of what a car can fit than a dishwasher! I’m laughing so much.

        1. I have carried so many appliances and furniture items in my minivans that I have lost count (I know you are not looking for a minivan ;)

    7. I just bought a new Subaru Forester a few months ago and love it so far. I think the dog crate would fit. And for not a hybrid SUV, they get good gas mileage. I thought I was a Toyota for Life person, but the Rav4 and the new Venza both felt cramped compared to the Forester.

    8. I have a BMW X3 with all the trimmings that would fit the bill. I got it as a used loner vehicle several years ago. I love that car and I’ll likely drive it into the ground. Also- a heated steering wheel is the perk I didn’t know I needed.

      1. +1 to the heated steering wheel. I have the Lincoln Corsair (which I love) and the heated steering wheel was such a delightful surprise!

    9. I love love love my Jeep Grand Cherokee (2019). I don’t know how big of a dog crate you need to put in there, but I have so much room in the back. My trim level has heated (and cooled!) seats, all wheel drive, and different suspension options to help with different terrain driving. But it also feels super luxurious (panorama sunroof! leather seats!) and is super fun to drive.

    10. I love my 4Runner. Bought bc it has tons of cargo space and bench like you asked, and heated seats. Checks all your boxes (well 4wd which IMO is better than AWD). Only downside is gas mileage isn’t great (but is comparable for class, like Jeep GC etc)

    11. Oh also if it’s helpful some anecdata why I DIDN’T buy some of the cars that were my contenders:
      – my parents and a friend love their Subarus, but apparently a lot in the late 2010s had bad engines, to the point the sales guy brought it up. It’s too early to tell if it’s a problem in new models I think. Same thing with jeeps; reliability history was really dicey
      -saw a lot of complaints about gas tanks on the new rav4s
      -a friend hates her Mazda cr5

  6. Silly, but I’m super excited to see how Dr. Jill decorates the White House. And I can’t wait for her Christmas decor either.

    1. I really hope she says f*ck tradition and doesn’t do any of that stuff. She’s such a smart and accomplished woman it seems so beneath her talents.

      1. I disagree, I’m a smart and accomplished woman but I enjoy decorating and don’t think it’s beneath me! Plus it’s not like she has to actually put the stuff up or even source it herself — just meet with the people who do it, share her vision, select things from a range of options, etc. She can spend a few hours on it, tops, and still have it look amazing and reflect her and her family’s tastes and values.

        1. +1 I enjoy decorating but for me that means hiring a decorator. It’s really quite fun giving feedback and making big decisions without having to search or think endlessly!

          1. You know that’s not really decorating, then, right? If you plan a menu and hire a chef, you don’t get to claim that you cooked.

      2. I hope she does too. All the traditional first lady stuff is so stuck in 1950’s housewifery.

  7. I loved all the matching coat/gloves combos today.

    VP Harris’s purple (+ FFL Obama and Clinton) was brilliant and thoughtful. Combining blue + red= purple AND ALSO a nod to Shirley Chisholm, who became the first Black woman elected to the United States Congress.

    1. Wow! Thanks for sharing, I didn’t grasp the nuances of the purple choic but I must say thought that madam VP was glowing in that particular shade.

      Agree on all the great coats and gloves!

    2. I LOVED her purple coat. It suited her so well, and the symbolism was great.

      I know it’s fluffy, but I love checking out the inauguration coats. It was fun to see some color. That said, mustard was NOT a great choice for Klobuchar. (I have the same skin tone and yellow washes me out terribly.) To nod to her Minnesota roots, I would’ve reversed her coat and scarf colors — burgundy coat, mustard scarf.

      Michelle Obama’s aubergine was beautiful, as was Jill Biden’s teal.

      That little pink coat on one of the Biden grandkids was so sweet.

  8. I need Ella Emhoff’s coat and the outfit of the Biden lady in the tan-ish pink color. Please and thank you.

        1. I was calling it a dark peach, but sometimes that are very precise color names that I have never heard of. (I am referring to one of Biden’s granddaughters, Finnegan perhaps?)

      1. I would call that color tobacco based on the photos I’ve seen. If we’re talking about the same outfit. Elle.com is calling it camel.

      2. Actually, she was very cute but it looked a little like vomit to me. I also could not figure out what the stuff was on her shoulders. Dad said it looked like guano. He does not like any kind of new fashion b/c I wind up buying more then I ever can wear. FOOEY on him.

      3. Porcini will give you a very similar Pantone colour. And it is sort of a pinky mushroomy color.

        For the person who asked about Amanda Gorman’s red headband – it’s from Prada, in stock, and they call it a headband.

    1. I don’t get Ella’s style at all (so not a Gen Z’er) but I love that she’s having a good time doing it and shaking things up. The whole family is super impressive.

      1. I’m a Gen Xer and I love her style. Like, a lot. I had the heart eyes going every time they showed her.

        Plus, Kamala’s great nieces in their little matching faux fur coats plus docs. And natural hair!!

      2. Agreed! I would love to see the coat without the white collar (I had those last time round, and am not ready for a comeback!) and think it would be very lovely without that bit, but with a slighly Victorian blush blouse under.

Comments are closed.