Presented in Maison Martin Margiela’s Spring/Summer 2007 collection, this halter top extends a recurring line of inquiry in the house’s work, where aproned, suspended, and reduced constructions were used to reframe how a garment is held on the body. Earlier Margiela collections had already explored related open-front and apron-like formats, treating clothing less as a fixed category than as a modular structure. By Spring/Summer 2007, that logic appears here in a fine-knit halter reduced to two elongated panels joined at the neck and front fastening.
Stretch knit halter top.
Cotton.
W14.6” x L31.1”
Laan Amsterdam
$220 USD
Worldwide 3-10 day shipping, final sale.
Presented in Maison Martin Margiela’s Spring/Summer 2007 collection, this halter top extends a recurring line of inquiry in the house’s work, where aproned, suspended, and reduced constructions were used to reframe how a garment is held on the body. Earlier Margiela collections had already explored related open-front and apron-like formats, treating clothing less as a fixed category than as a modular structure. By Spring/Summer 2007, that logic appears here in a fine-knit halter reduced to two elongated panels joined at the neck and front fastening.
Stretch knit halter top.
Cotton.
W14.6” x L31.1”
Presented in Maison Martin Margiela’s Spring/Summer 2007 collection, this halter top extends a recurring line of inquiry in the house’s work, where aproned, suspended, and reduced constructions were used to reframe how a garment is held on the body. Earlier Margiela collections had already explored related open-front and apron-like formats, treating clothing less as a fixed category than as a modular structure. By Spring/Summer 2007, that logic appears here in a fine-knit halter reduced to two elongated panels joined at the neck and front fastening.
Stretch knit halter top.
Cotton.
W14.6” x L31.1”