


Petite Mendigote | Short Mesh Skater Skirt - Black
A sharp, abbreviated line. Petite Mendigote’s Skirt 225julie Black opens with the crisp geometry of a skater silhouette, but the execution is anything but childlike. The hem sits decisively short, skimming the upper thigh with a precision that suggests a tennis club uniform reimagined for the city. There is no flounce for flounce’s sake; the cut is deliberate, the volume controlled, the entire gesture one of restrained energy. It is a silhouette that demands a straight spine and a purposeful stride. The fabric is the real provocation. A fine black mesh, almost sheer in its delicacy, it possesses a surprising structural integrity. The hand is dry and slightly crisp, a tactile counterpoint to its visual lightness. This is not a limp, clinging knit; it holds its shape against the body, creating a gentle A-line that moves like a bell. The mesh’s transparency is a quiet wink—a suggestion of skin that remains a suggestion, never a statement. Against the opacity of a winter sweater or the raw edge of a denim jacket, it becomes a textural anchor, a piece of deliberate air. Construction is deceptively simple. An elastic waistband sits flat against the hip, offering ease without bulk, a foundation for tucking or layering. The skirt’s fluidity comes from a blend of cotton and viscose—52% cotton, 48% viscose—that grants it a soft, breathable weight. It falls without static, draping in clean, unbroken lines from waist to hem. Mariana, at 1.74m, wears a size S; for a size 36, the total length is 45 cm, with a half waist circumference of 32 cm. The proportions are calibrated for a modern, elongated silhouette. In motion, the skirt performs. It swings with a dancer’s precision, flaring just enough to catch the air without losing its shape. The mesh catches light in a subtle, matte shimmer, a ghost of movement against the leg. This is a piece for transitional days—a Sunday morning market, a late lunch in the Marais, an evening that starts with a glass of wine and ends with a walk home. It asks for nothing more than a simple top and flat sandals, yet it rewards a more considered approach: a crisp white button-down tucked in, or a slouchy cashmere crewneck half-tucked for a studied nonchalance. Pair it with the Melba cardigan for a look that balances feminine softness with a casual, almost athletic edge. The skirt is not an occasion; it is a foundation for one.
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
A sharp, abbreviated line. Petite Mendigote’s Skirt 225julie Black opens with the crisp geometry of a skater silhouette, but the execution is anything but childlike. The hem sits decisively short, skimming the upper thigh with a precision that suggests a tennis club uniform reimagined for the city. There is no flounce for flounce’s sake; the cut is deliberate, the volume controlled, the entire gesture one of restrained energy. It is a silhouette that demands a straight spine and a purposeful stride. The fabric is the real provocation. A fine black mesh, almost sheer in its delicacy, it possesses a surprising structural integrity. The hand is dry and slightly crisp, a tactile counterpoint to its visual lightness. This is not a limp, clinging knit; it holds its shape against the body, creating a gentle A-line that moves like a bell. The mesh’s transparency is a quiet wink—a suggestion of skin that remains a suggestion, never a statement. Against the opacity of a winter sweater or the raw edge of a denim jacket, it becomes a textural anchor, a piece of deliberate air. Construction is deceptively simple. An elastic waistband sits flat against the hip, offering ease without bulk, a foundation for tucking or layering. The skirt’s fluidity comes from a blend of cotton and viscose—52% cotton, 48% viscose—that grants it a soft, breathable weight. It falls without static, draping in clean, unbroken lines from waist to hem. Mariana, at 1.74m, wears a size S; for a size 36, the total length is 45 cm, with a half waist circumference of 32 cm. The proportions are calibrated for a modern, elongated silhouette. In motion, the skirt performs. It swings with a dancer’s precision, flaring just enough to catch the air without losing its shape. The mesh catches light in a subtle, matte shimmer, a ghost of movement against the leg. This is a piece for transitional days—a Sunday morning market, a late lunch in the Marais, an evening that starts with a glass of wine and ends with a walk home. It asks for nothing more than a simple top and flat sandals, yet it rewards a more considered approach: a crisp white button-down tucked in, or a slouchy cashmere crewneck half-tucked for a studied nonchalance. Pair it with the Melba cardigan for a look that balances feminine softness with a casual, almost athletic edge. The skirt is not an occasion; it is a foundation for one.






















