the times | Wednesday June 8 2022 7
fashion
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F
orget Bojo if you can,
here’s boho instead.
Admittedly, this fashion
trend has similar
Marmite qualities to
our prime minister —
not to mention a habit
of lingering on long
after the general public are sick of it
— but we’ve had enough of a break
since the last go-round that many
of us have forgotten its less vote-
winning characteristics.
Remember Sienna Miller in a floral
minidress and pirate boots? Kate Moss
in skinny jeans, waistcoat and chain
belt, an Alexander McQueen skull
scarf looped around her neck? They
were the poster girls — or at least
the Heat magazine pin-ups — of a
movement that began in millennium-
era Primrose Hill and ended just
pre-crash on the sale rails of Topshop.
Now, on the back of a Gen Z-powered
Are you (new) boho enough?
Festival dressing is
back, but this time
it’s sleek and city-
friendly. Just don’t
overdo it, warns
Harriet Walker
revival of all things Noughties, it’s time
to re-Raphaelite your wardrobe.
“We need to add some fun back
into our lives,” agrees the designer
Alice Temperley, whose Somerset-
based label has boho-ed everyone
over the years from Keira Knightley
to the Duchess of Cambridge. “It’s
a timeless and carefree look, perfect
for thrift and vintage shopping and
making use of those for ever pieces
in your wardrobe.”
On the high street — and in pub
gardens — denim minis and cowboy
boots are already back. The number of
times the latter have sold out in stores
has risen 98 per cent in the past year,
according to the retail intelligence
company Edited. Its data also shows
a quarter more waistcoats in the
shops over the same period. That
isn’t because the fellas are suddenly
wearing them to work again, but
thanks to a vanguard of clothes
horses who have begun styling them
al fleshco with jeans and wafty skirts.
Hold onto your flower crown,
because on the catwalk Conner Ives’s
London Fashion Week collection
featured not just handkerchief tops
and bandanas but low-rise printed
flares too. The street-stylers outside
last February’s Etro show in Milan
— boho’s spiritual home — were
decked out in the label’s paisley and
embroidered suede. Then there’s
the fringing: Edited estimates a
57 per cent rise in sales this year,
although it admits that many pieces
were discounted as soon as Coachella
kicked off.
There’s the rub — and I’m not just
talking about cowboy boots on a warm
day. Boho has become so inextricably
linked to so-called festival chic that
many of us now consider it a sort of
fancy dress. Indeed, its costumey
ubiquity was a large part of its
descent into the sort of fashion cliché
that very few of us who remember
2004 (or the 1970s) want any part of
again. (That, and the fact so many
of us teamed our ponchos with
Uggs back then.) Flâneur fashion
only really works when the fops are
in the minority — once everyone’s
a bohemian, then by definition
nobody is.
Yet this look still has a lot to offer.
Boho’s blend of pretty floatiness and
a bit of rock’n’roll is just the ticket for
the first truly post-pandemic summer.
The prairie dresses, straw bonnets
and general Petit Trianon vibe of
2019 were killed off by a lockdown
that felt less bucolic than bubonic,
and the sweatpants and cynicism
that replaced it have only just begun
to lift. This is where “Boho 3.0”
comes in: that’s boho for the over-
30s, which is sleek and citified.
What’s different this time
around? Fewer accessories, and
that includes rock star boyfriends.
New boho retains the mishmash of
styles — something like Pink City
Prints’s Tamsin top (£150,
pinkcityprints.com) and Mango’s slit
denim midi (£35.99, shop.mango.com)
— but cuts back on all the bangles,
feathers and overly styled hats.
For dresses, redeploy vintage
paisleys and Talitha Getty-ish kaftan
styles (Jigsaw has a great range of
embroidered linen midi and mini
peasant dresses, from £145, jigsaw-
online.com). But hold the fringed
jacket and keep sandals modern; I’m
not convinced elaborate gladiator
sandals should be part of this revival.
Instead, I like Everlane’s elegantly
Velcro-ed Renew Sport pair (£78,
everlane.com — made from 100 per
cent recycled materials) or
Birkenstock’s Boston clogs in taupe
suede (£120, birkenstock.com).
The rise of the colourful, printed
dolman jacket is another simple route
to adding a bit of boho. I am a huge
fan of the British label Homebrunn’s
lightly quilted Liberty printed layers:
its Jasper jacket is the perfect
bohemian foil for an otherwise quite
straight outfit (£395, homebrunn.com).
I’m also a little bit in love with Boden’s
short-sleeved smocked paisley blouse
(£75, boden.co.uk).
As for finishing touches, exercise
some restraint. Add a scarf or gold
hoops by all means, but put the brakes
on before you hit Captain Jack
Sparrow territory. For more reason
than simply boho ones these days.
Twitter: @harrywalker1
Fashion editor
and stylist
Kim Hersov
Influencer
Laura Bailey
Influencer
Gitta Banko
Tops, £60 each,
skirts, £100 each;
all aspiga.com
Dress, £410;
bymalina.com