




Bellerose | Oversized Sweatshirt in Pink Flash-Wash
An oversized crewneck sweatshirt that finds its tension in the deliberate unraveling of polish—this is Bellerose’s Flips52 T1510, rendered in a flash-wash pink that reads less like sweetness and more like a sharp, after-hours glow. The color is not shy; it’s a neon-tinted blush that catches light and holds it, a deliberate provocation against the garment’s otherwise undone ease. Dropped shoulders and exposed seams form the architecture of a silhouette that feels both raw and refined, as if the construction itself is a statement—stitches left visible, edges left to speak. The ribbed cuffs and elasticated hem anchor the volume, preventing the slouch from becoming sloppy, while a small woven brand label offers the only concession to quiet branding. The hand is where this piece earns its weight. A cotton-polyester blend (75.5% cotton, 24.5% polyester) yields a fabric that is soft without being limp, substantial without being stiff. The flash-wash treatment imparts a slightly worn, almost powdery finish to the surface—like a favorite sweatshirt that has already lived a life, but one you haven’t yet lived in. The interior feels brushed against the skin, warm enough for early autumn or late spring, but breathable enough to layer over a silk slip or under a sharp wool coat. The texture is tactile, not decorative; you want to touch it, and it rewards touch. Fit is deliberately generous. Take your usual size for the intended slouch—a silhouette that moves with you, not against you, draping from the dropped shoulders into a relaxed, boxy body. Size down for a sharper, more fitted line that tucks cleanly into high-waisted trousers or a leather skirt. The exposed seams run along the shoulders and sleeves, tracing the construction like a blueprint, while the ribbing at cuffs and hem holds the shape in check, preventing the oversized cut from swallowing you whole. It is a study in controlled volume: the fabric falls, but it does not drown. Movement is effortless. The sweatshirt swings slightly with each step, the fabric gathering and releasing at the elbows and waist. It is a piece built for the kind of motion that doesn’t announce itself—walking through a gallery, meeting for coffee, catching a train. It belongs to a wardrobe where ease is a virtue, not a compromise. For styling, pair it with raw-hem denim and leather derbies for a contrast in textures—the softness of the flash-wash against the rigidity of denim, the polish of leather against the undone seams. Or layer it over a white cotton button-down, collar left out, for a take on preppy that feels more like a secret than a statement.
Original: $23.09
-65%$23.09
$8.08Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
An oversized crewneck sweatshirt that finds its tension in the deliberate unraveling of polish—this is Bellerose’s Flips52 T1510, rendered in a flash-wash pink that reads less like sweetness and more like a sharp, after-hours glow. The color is not shy; it’s a neon-tinted blush that catches light and holds it, a deliberate provocation against the garment’s otherwise undone ease. Dropped shoulders and exposed seams form the architecture of a silhouette that feels both raw and refined, as if the construction itself is a statement—stitches left visible, edges left to speak. The ribbed cuffs and elasticated hem anchor the volume, preventing the slouch from becoming sloppy, while a small woven brand label offers the only concession to quiet branding. The hand is where this piece earns its weight. A cotton-polyester blend (75.5% cotton, 24.5% polyester) yields a fabric that is soft without being limp, substantial without being stiff. The flash-wash treatment imparts a slightly worn, almost powdery finish to the surface—like a favorite sweatshirt that has already lived a life, but one you haven’t yet lived in. The interior feels brushed against the skin, warm enough for early autumn or late spring, but breathable enough to layer over a silk slip or under a sharp wool coat. The texture is tactile, not decorative; you want to touch it, and it rewards touch. Fit is deliberately generous. Take your usual size for the intended slouch—a silhouette that moves with you, not against you, draping from the dropped shoulders into a relaxed, boxy body. Size down for a sharper, more fitted line that tucks cleanly into high-waisted trousers or a leather skirt. The exposed seams run along the shoulders and sleeves, tracing the construction like a blueprint, while the ribbing at cuffs and hem holds the shape in check, preventing the oversized cut from swallowing you whole. It is a study in controlled volume: the fabric falls, but it does not drown. Movement is effortless. The sweatshirt swings slightly with each step, the fabric gathering and releasing at the elbows and waist. It is a piece built for the kind of motion that doesn’t announce itself—walking through a gallery, meeting for coffee, catching a train. It belongs to a wardrobe where ease is a virtue, not a compromise. For styling, pair it with raw-hem denim and leather derbies for a contrast in textures—the softness of the flash-wash against the rigidity of denim, the polish of leather against the undone seams. Or layer it over a white cotton button-down, collar left out, for a take on preppy that feels more like a secret than a statement.






















