



Lis Lareida | Gigi Jacket - Oversized Shell Metal-Taupe
This is not a jacket that asks for permission. Lis Lareida’s Gigi arrives in black, a monochrome monument to architectural restraint, defined by an oversized volume that reads as deliberate, not slouchy. The silhouette is sharp and clean, with a stand collar that frames the neckline like a precise incision—neither soft nor severe, but exact. It is a shape that holds its own air, a sculpted void that commands space without shouting. In a wardrobe of quieter pieces, the Gigi becomes the anchor, the counterweight, the moment where proportion takes precedence over pattern. The hand of this jacket is deceptively light. Its shell is engineered from 100% recycled polyester, treated with a C0 water-repellent finish that repels drizzle without compromising breathability. The fabric has a dry, matte hand—almost papery in its crispness—yet it yields to movement with a subtle rustle that speaks to technical precision. Inside, a smooth nylon lining glides over layers, while the polyester filling provides insulation without bulk. There is no quilting, no padding; the warmth is hidden, structural, an invisible architecture that allows the jacket to remain lean even as it envelops. Fit is the defining negotiation here. The Gigi is deliberately oversized, cut to drape generously from the shoulders and fall in a straight, unbroken line to the hip. The sleeves are ample, the body roomy enough to accommodate a fine-gauge cashmere turtleneck or a silk shell without distortion. Construction is minimal: concealed snap closures, clean seams, no extraneous hardware. The monochrome black finish absorbs light and flattens texture, making the jacket a canvas for contrast—against the fluidity of a slip dress, the grain of raw denim, or the sheen of a patent boot. In motion, the Gigi shifts with a quiet authority. It does not cling or flutter; it moves as a solid block, the fabric holding its shape even as you walk. The water-repellent finish makes it seasonally versatile—a shield against autumn drizzle, a layer over winter knits, a transitional piece that bridges the gap between crisp and cold. It is at home on a Parisian sidewalk at dusk, in a gallery opening where the air is chilled, or on a train platform in early March. The occasion is not the point; the attitude is. Style it unbuttoned over a silk slip dress to play with density and drape—the matte black against liquid satin, the rigid silhouette against a fluid hem. Or button it over a fine-gauge merino and wide-leg trouser for a study in monochrome minimalism. The Gigi does not complete an outfit; it redefines the proportions of one. Wear it as the final gesture, the one that makes everything else make sense.
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
This is not a jacket that asks for permission. Lis Lareida’s Gigi arrives in black, a monochrome monument to architectural restraint, defined by an oversized volume that reads as deliberate, not slouchy. The silhouette is sharp and clean, with a stand collar that frames the neckline like a precise incision—neither soft nor severe, but exact. It is a shape that holds its own air, a sculpted void that commands space without shouting. In a wardrobe of quieter pieces, the Gigi becomes the anchor, the counterweight, the moment where proportion takes precedence over pattern. The hand of this jacket is deceptively light. Its shell is engineered from 100% recycled polyester, treated with a C0 water-repellent finish that repels drizzle without compromising breathability. The fabric has a dry, matte hand—almost papery in its crispness—yet it yields to movement with a subtle rustle that speaks to technical precision. Inside, a smooth nylon lining glides over layers, while the polyester filling provides insulation without bulk. There is no quilting, no padding; the warmth is hidden, structural, an invisible architecture that allows the jacket to remain lean even as it envelops. Fit is the defining negotiation here. The Gigi is deliberately oversized, cut to drape generously from the shoulders and fall in a straight, unbroken line to the hip. The sleeves are ample, the body roomy enough to accommodate a fine-gauge cashmere turtleneck or a silk shell without distortion. Construction is minimal: concealed snap closures, clean seams, no extraneous hardware. The monochrome black finish absorbs light and flattens texture, making the jacket a canvas for contrast—against the fluidity of a slip dress, the grain of raw denim, or the sheen of a patent boot. In motion, the Gigi shifts with a quiet authority. It does not cling or flutter; it moves as a solid block, the fabric holding its shape even as you walk. The water-repellent finish makes it seasonally versatile—a shield against autumn drizzle, a layer over winter knits, a transitional piece that bridges the gap between crisp and cold. It is at home on a Parisian sidewalk at dusk, in a gallery opening where the air is chilled, or on a train platform in early March. The occasion is not the point; the attitude is. Style it unbuttoned over a silk slip dress to play with density and drape—the matte black against liquid satin, the rigid silhouette against a fluid hem. Or button it over a fine-gauge merino and wide-leg trouser for a study in monochrome minimalism. The Gigi does not complete an outfit; it redefines the proportions of one. Wear it as the final gesture, the one that makes everything else make sense.




















