



Yves Salomon | Rex Rabbit Fur Gilet Madeleine
The Yves Salomon Madeleine gilet is a study in restrained opulence, where the raw sensuality of rex rabbit fur meets a silhouette of deliberate, architectural clarity. This is not a garment that clamors for attention; it commands it through the sheer, tactile authority of its material. The sleeveless form is cut with a precision that borders on the severe, a clean, unbroken line that allows the dense, plush pile to become the narrative’s sole protagonist. It is a piece that understands the power of subtraction—removing sleeves to amplify the texture, stripping away the superfluous to let the fur speak in its own, unmistakable language. To touch the Madeleine is to understand its fundamental luxury. The rex rabbit fur is a paradox of sensations—a surface that is at once impossibly soft and densely structured, each hair a micro-filament of warmth. The hand moves across a landscape of deep, even pile, a consistent, almost velveteen plushness that invites a second, more lingering caress. This is not a fleeting trend; it is a material that feels permanent, weighty with substance yet light in its drape. The fur’s natural, un-dyed spectrum of tones adds a subtle dimension, a monochromatic depth that shifts with the light, avoiding flatness in favor of a rich, organic complexity. The fit is a masterclass in deliberate proportion. The gilet skims the body with a relaxed, straight line, neither clinging nor swamping, creating a clean, elongated column that is profoundly flattering. The armholes are cut with a generous, considered sweep, ensuring no restriction of movement and allowing for substantial layering beneath. The construction is faultless: the fur is meticulously pieced, the seams invisible to the touch, the interior lined with a whisper-weight silk or cupro that allows the gilet to slide effortlessly over other fabrics. It is a garment built not just to be worn, but to be moved in—to be a second, sumptuous skin. In motion, the Madeleine reveals its true character. The fur does not bounce or jostle; it settles and sways with a quiet, liquid grace, the dense pile parting and reforming like a field of tall grass in a slow wind. This is a piece for the urban landscape, for the pause between the car and the restaurant, for the gallery opening where the art is on the walls and on your shoulders. Its occasion is any moment that calls for a definitive, low-key statement of taste. Style it over a fine-gauge cashmere turtleneck in charcoal or cream for a monochrome study in texture, or layer it over a crisp, architectural poplin shirt to create a sharp contrast between the organic and the structured. For evening, let it sit over a column of black silk—its warmth and volume providing the sole, spectacular ornament. The Madeleine is not an accessory; it is the outfit’s central thesis.
Original: $104.59
-65%$104.59
$36.61Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
The Yves Salomon Madeleine gilet is a study in restrained opulence, where the raw sensuality of rex rabbit fur meets a silhouette of deliberate, architectural clarity. This is not a garment that clamors for attention; it commands it through the sheer, tactile authority of its material. The sleeveless form is cut with a precision that borders on the severe, a clean, unbroken line that allows the dense, plush pile to become the narrative’s sole protagonist. It is a piece that understands the power of subtraction—removing sleeves to amplify the texture, stripping away the superfluous to let the fur speak in its own, unmistakable language. To touch the Madeleine is to understand its fundamental luxury. The rex rabbit fur is a paradox of sensations—a surface that is at once impossibly soft and densely structured, each hair a micro-filament of warmth. The hand moves across a landscape of deep, even pile, a consistent, almost velveteen plushness that invites a second, more lingering caress. This is not a fleeting trend; it is a material that feels permanent, weighty with substance yet light in its drape. The fur’s natural, un-dyed spectrum of tones adds a subtle dimension, a monochromatic depth that shifts with the light, avoiding flatness in favor of a rich, organic complexity. The fit is a masterclass in deliberate proportion. The gilet skims the body with a relaxed, straight line, neither clinging nor swamping, creating a clean, elongated column that is profoundly flattering. The armholes are cut with a generous, considered sweep, ensuring no restriction of movement and allowing for substantial layering beneath. The construction is faultless: the fur is meticulously pieced, the seams invisible to the touch, the interior lined with a whisper-weight silk or cupro that allows the gilet to slide effortlessly over other fabrics. It is a garment built not just to be worn, but to be moved in—to be a second, sumptuous skin. In motion, the Madeleine reveals its true character. The fur does not bounce or jostle; it settles and sways with a quiet, liquid grace, the dense pile parting and reforming like a field of tall grass in a slow wind. This is a piece for the urban landscape, for the pause between the car and the restaurant, for the gallery opening where the art is on the walls and on your shoulders. Its occasion is any moment that calls for a definitive, low-key statement of taste. Style it over a fine-gauge cashmere turtleneck in charcoal or cream for a monochrome study in texture, or layer it over a crisp, architectural poplin shirt to create a sharp contrast between the organic and the structured. For evening, let it sit over a column of black silk—its warmth and volume providing the sole, spectacular ornament. The Madeleine is not an accessory; it is the outfit’s central thesis.




















