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LOS
ANGELES—Erin Wasson knows a thing or two about how to
make a vest look cool. She’s been the stylist for the
past two runway shows from Alexander Wang, a young
New York designer making his mark with smart, moody sportswear. For
the Fall show, Wasson threw a longer, unbuttoned vest
over a baggy white T-shirt (teamed with skinny leather
pants) and paired tight, buttoned-up vests with a black
miniskirt and raggedy cutoff jeans. For spring, she
teamed a boxy gray vest with a pair of bloomer-esque
black shorts. In both shows, the structured pieces look
effortless—in that Kate Moss/Charlotte Gainsbourg “Who,
me?” way.
Wasson
is also a big name in the modeling world and has walked
the runways for Proenza Schouler, Ralph Lauren,
Balenciaga and appeared in campaigns for mass-market
biggies such as
Victoria’s
Secret and Maybelline. And she’s a girl-about-town in
LA—she also lives in New York—and frequently pulls cute
vests out of her own closets to hit the scene. “I always
thought of vests as a version of the cardigan,” she
says, “another way to layer up your look.”
Wasson
favors a fuller-cut vest but doesn’t dismiss the
minivest (one that looks two sizes too small and
sometimes doesn’t button) sweeping Hollywood. Either
way, the bottom of the vest should just about meet the
waistline of a skirt or pant—or dip below it. (The days
of wearing a shrunken vest over a long, untucked
T-shirt, à la Hilary Duff, are over.)

“I think
a vest looks better when you wear it with a V-neck,”
Wasson says. “It shows off your collarbone and your
cleavage, if you have it—which I don’t.”
And
forget about overpriced designer tees. Wasson is a fan
of the Hanes T-shirts you buy in a three-pack to wear
underneath (tuck them in if the vest is shorter). Roll
up the sleeves and it looks a little undone, like you’re
not trying too hard. Or just wear the vest alone. “I
love the look of a vest with nothing on underneath. The
parts of the body a vest shows off are things that women
should be really stoked on.”
Wasson
likes the contrast of a suit vest with street basics. “A
classic button-down underneath gets a little too preppy
for me,” she says. “It seems a little too contrived. And
I’m not a fan of the tie. A great scarf is much cooler
and a little less done-up. I don’t think everything
should be a total look. Try to find something a little
quirky. If it’s too much of a uniform, change it up.
Take the pants you’re wearing off and throw on jeans, or
throw a denim jacket on over the vest. Take the
unexpected and throw it on.”
Wasson
favors chunky, vintage costume jewelry such as oversized
rings, thick bracelets and quirky, organic-looking metal
pieces. “I’ve always been inspired by tribal, armor,
organic and Deco designs, but if I wear a necklace, I
keep it to just one.”

Wasson
found one of her favorite vests—a men’s black waistcoat
covered in metal studs—at a Los Angeles thrift store and
likes vests of all stripes. “I like a proper men’s
pinstripe, but I’m even down with an Indian-inspired
Aztec print.”
But if
you’re going loud on top, keep it quiet on the bottom
(and underneath), with basic, solid-colored pieces.
Layering a patterned vest under things is another way to
go. “I think the trick to making that work is when only
a bit of the print pops out, just enough to add
contrast.”
Pencil-skirts and long, voluminous (even hippie) skirts
are two favorite pairings. “Just make sure you don’t
wear a short skirt, or you’ll look like Britney
Spears—like you have on a naughty schoolgirl costume.” n |