Functional Draping Tips from… a Statue

Yesterday we celebrated International Workers' Day, but the same date – 1st May – on the liturgical calendar is also the feast of "St. Joseph the Worker".

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For the occasion a statue of the saint was brought in the chapel at Domus Sanctae Marthae in Rome where Pope Francis celebrates Mass every day.

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St. Joseph is usually represented with the tools of his trade in his hands, that remind us he was a carpenter and woodworker.

Apart from the trademark tools, this statue features a key accessory: the statue wears a long-sleeved tunic with a short-sleeved apron on top and a belt around the waist. The belt has a purpose, but it is also decorative: it has indeed got a vertical buckle that serves to secure one end of the belt, but it also ends up creating a fluid and draped movement with the fabric of the apron, giving it a more fitted shape.

When we talk about religious inspirations in fashion our minds immediately conjure up the pomp and ceremony of certain rituals, but in this case we have a humble design (the apron) and a basic accessory (the belt) that provide us with a simple, yet perfect and functional look.

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