Fashion Weekly

Why pockets are in

January 21 - 27, 2009
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Just stop for a moment and check your pockets. If you are wearing jeans you probably have at least five.

A shirt carries a breast pocket. Fitted trousers have side pockets. A cardigan may well have two patches, three, or four if it's alluding to Chanel. Even a dress is likely to sport sneaky pockets tucked into the seams, great slabs slapped on the front or dainty decorative ones just about big enough for a doll's hand.

If you managed to leave the house today unaccompanied by pockets, you are a rarity. Perhaps you broke out in a catsuit. Once, no outfit was complete without a handbag. Now, none is complete without a pocket.

This has been a quiet revolution. Ever since Mulberry launched the infamous Roxanne in October 2003, handbags have been growing in price and size, their increasingly ferocious hardware glinting in our hands like giant knuckle dusters.

It is a trend that seemed to reach a self-regarding peak in spring 2007 when Louis Vuitton issued a $35,600 (BD13,417) bag comprised of segments of all its recent successful bags. Then, in March last year, just 12 months on, the tide turned.

Brief, sheepish asides about the end of the 'It' bag have peppered Vogue, although the sensitivities of its advertisers have deterred it from nailing the demise. At the autumn/winter catwalks few or no handbags appeared on such diverse runways as Givenchy, Versace and Balenciaga. Instead, models sauntered along with hands dug deep into the folds of their clothes.

The London designer Louise Gray showed a black shift on which the multicoloured utility pockets were so large they looked as if they were holding the dress hostage. The pockets had become the protagonist.

"I'm obsessed with pockets," says Anita Borzyszkowska, of Gap, a store that has been at the forefront of the pocket revival on the high street, from hoodie-style pouches on sweater dresses to Chanel-style patches on cardigans and invisible slips sewn into the side seams of dresses.

Borzyszkowska - whose personal pocket tally for the day is seven (jeans plus a boyfriend-style cardigan) - cites Gap's collaboration two years ago with the designer Roland Mouret as the turning point.

His collection of 10 dresses, much lauded at launch for its jolliness of colour and blousy styling, was in fact conceived with something else in mind. "One of the goals," says Borzyszkowska, "was for everything to have a pocket."

The trapeze dress, the frock of summer 2007, swung with ease when propelled by hands in pockets.

Secreted in the folds of fashion history, pockets seem to offer an inside take on the way we dress. In their tiny dimensions huge changes have been conveyed. Coco Chanel's trademark jackets in the 30s caused such a storm because they incorporated conspicuous pockets - for centuries associated only with men's dress - and thereby promised to liberate women with practicality.







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