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Ảnh của tác giảLLC AaronShirt

AaronShirt LLC - Saint Anselm Hawks 2024 NCAA Division II Field Hockey National Champions T-Shirts

The leaves are changing and the pumpkin patch on grocery store shelves is on full display—the official and undeniable sign that fall has arrived. In fashion terms, that means sweater weather: a predictable evolution in our wardrobe cycles, sure, but also a wonderfully cozy time to get dressed. While there are plenty of runway-approved ways to get your wool and cashmere fix this season, our current favorite has to be the cardigan. For fall 2024, the wardrobe chameleon was seen at Prada in poppy candy tones cropped with black and gray pencil skirts, at Miu Miu paired with tailored, layered sweaters, and at Paco Rabanne in oversized, layered grandpa silhouettes in plaid. We love them for their versatility and layering ability. And once you figure out your favorite ways to style a cardigan, the style can easily take you from the office to after hours—not to mention it's an easy layer you'll wear well into spring. Shop this season's favorite cardigans and learn how to style them with us below.


After the ceremony, I removed my veil and put on my jewelry: a pearl necklace, ring, and earrings set from my mother’s ’80s and a natural pearl necklace from my mother-in-law. (In Ashkenazi Jewish tradition, brides do not wear jewelry during the ceremony.) While removing a veil might seem like a minor post-wedding change to my look, the modest, unadorned gown felt completely different—and daring, I’d say. No outfit change was necessary. In fact, the only piece of clothing that stayed on me? Cream-colored pumps by the manliest shoe designer, Stuart Weitzman.

Toward the end of the dress fitting, I remembered the final essential piece of clothing for a traditional Jewish marriage: the veil. It’s the most storied part of Old Testament history! Rebecca wore a veil when she married Isaac, and of course, Jacob married Leah, thinking she was Rachel—unfortunately, he couldn’t tell because there was a thick strip of fabric covering her face. But I digress. The veil could be a sheet. It could be a piece of tissue. Whatever it was, I needed a veil—and I immediately thought of Batsheva Hay. In her own wedding photos, Hay wore a thick fabric veil, which she told me was her grandmother’s tablecloth. But there were no leftovers of her grandmother’s fabric for me. I went back to Mood Fabrics with Choi, and she helped me find the material that Hay needed to create the perfect veil. The dress was made of a silky satin fabric, so why not go big, exaggerated, and bejeweled? I bought the crystal-embroidered fabric and brought it to Hay’s downtown office. There, she and a team member created the piece by cutting it out and lining it with mesh to keep it from slipping off my head.

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