Lee Bender was not only a genius when it came to tea-dresses and wearable separates, she was also brilliant at creating wearable suits for women in the early Seventies. Mostly what we see are skirt suits, but her trouser suits were something of a trademark at the time - and are bizarrely somewhat rarer to find nowadays. This suit is a wonderfully relaxed, pyjama-style cut which would have been a superb alternative to floaty, plungey dresses for a groovy young hostess at the time (very similar to the Ossie and Jean Muir suits on my inspirational images page - see below). The trousers are, frankly, enormous in width and flare out beautifully from a typical high waist. The jacket is cut loosely and flares out from the gently gathered front yoke and completely freely in the back, it is then tied to fit in the waist with a completely separate satin tie. There are no belt loops, so presumably this is also an optional thing and you could just as easily tie the satin belt around your hair if you wanted to keep the jacket lovely and loose. I love Bender's work in satin backed crepe, and the way she used the satin to trim the jacket so beautifully at the collar and cuffs.
Bus Stop were the high-kickin', fun-loving antidote to moody Biba on Kensington High Street in the 60s and 70s. Started by Lee Bender, and named to reflect their quintessentially British look. They also produced some of the finest Boutique clothing of the period, always wearable and flattering (so of course it's always hard for me to part with them...) Officially, well according to me, this is the sexiest Bus Stop dress ever! Long and lean in crushed black velvet, a fabric Lee Bender was very fond of using, with a sexy halter neck exposing your back. The real focus of the dress however is the sexy tied front feature which reveals a very sexy little segment of skin and cleavage.
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