Long and slouchy, colourful or embellished, the humble knit is la mode again. Find inspiration from six cardie aficionados – from Doris Day to Christopher Kane



Cardies on the catwalk at Christopher Kane, Prada and Burberry; Kanye West, Kurt Cobain and Cate Blanchett.
Composite: Rex/Getty

Button up: the great cardigan comeback

Long and slouchy, colourful or decorated, the humble knit is fashionable again. Find inspiration from six cardie aficionados – from Doris Day to Christopher Kane

It’s August. But leave behind about what is happening outside the window. In fashion, that means it’s at all times to think about knitwear. This particular August, that means conclusion about cardigans. The humble button-up, usually chucked into the groundwork of an out-all-day bag for fear of it getting cold later, is fashionable again – as a consequence ofs to turns on catwalks including Christopher Kane, Prada and Burberry. To secure you are a cut above the cardiganed hordes this winter, you’ll need cardie inspo. See subordinate to.

Doris Day

The beaded cardigan is likely to see its eBay searches skyrocket this period, thanks to Prada. The Italian label had the kind of cardies more as usual found in vintage stores, and were once worn – if possible with a Serena Williams-approved poodle skirt – by teenagers at soda sprays in 1950s America, inspired by the likes of Grace Kelly and Doris Day. The rage side note: these girls were also kick offs of the most modern tic, shoulder-robing.

Kurt Cobain

Anyone who doubts Cobain’s cult beguile should look to the sale of his dirty cardigan for more than £100,000 in 2015. The Nirvana frontman has protracted been a fashion moodboard reference and this season is no disagree with. The shape is similar to the ones Christopher Kane designed: extended, slouchy and a bit “doesn’t fit, don’t care”, though Kane’s are a lot cleaner. His oil ingenious cardie is my cardigan goal this season — look here, if you’re availed. And, in a twist of circumstance, it’s probably – for once – a fraction of the price of the aboriginal.

The Log Lady

While the Log Lady, or the actor Catherine Coulson, diminished in 2015, she lives on in the first episode of the Twin Peaks resurrection and, of course, through her excellent cardigan wearing. The Log Lady’s cardigan together with shirt plus rollneck plus brooch plus log look petitions to the maximalism of one Alessandro Michele, the designer at Gucci currently. He’s the man to condemnation for your impulse to double – sometimes triple – layer your look.


Notable cardigan wearing: Catherine Coulson, AKA the Log Lady. Photograph: ABC Photo Archives/Disney ABC Telly Group

Kanye West

The collegiate style is very much as regards of the beta Kanye – pre-Twitter rants, pre-Yeezy, pre-Kim. It’s also good-looking cute, especially when worn by Drop Out Bear on the movement of Late Registration, circa 2005. West himself harassed his Letterman cardigan with proper bling and stunner bits. It’s all a long way from Vetements hoodies, leather trousers and a bomber. Consequence, it will be back in fashion any time now.


Cardigan prowess: Michelle Obama. Photograph: Rex/Shutterstock

Michelle Obama

Yet another rational to miss the Obamas: Michelle’s cardigan prowess makes Melania look – contrite – joyless and contrived. During her eight years in the White Lodgings, the former first lady wore brightly coloured cardigans to manifest in Vogue, to visit the UK and, of course, to meet the Queen. Thanks to her, cardigans are now agreeable in the most protocol-heavy rooms in the world. Obama is their advocate saint.

Cate Blanchett

In Blue Jasmine, Cate Blanchett plays a number used to the rarified world of the Upper West Side, shifted to the bohemia of San Francisco. The way you can tell by looking at her? The cardigans. Blanchett has an provocative array of the kind of cardis that women with weekly blowdry assignations love: patterned, embellished and in a tasteful colour palette. In compressed, the kind of item of clothing that does the public front even when your life is falling apart.

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