Square dance: The story behind the Hermès scarf

Fashion fades, but scarves are eternal: Olivier Saillard celebrates the versatility and sheer elegance of the simple silk carré

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It is the item of clothing with the simplest possible form, and without doubt the most archaic. A piece of silk cut into a square (carré), whose function remains undefined. For as long as we can remember, it has been one of those unnecessary accessories that becomes more classic than fashionable, refuting all the facts of silhouettes that change from decade to decade.

Since it first entered the house of Hermès, the carré has not moved, except in the folds of the arms of the beauties who wear it. Its raison d’être is its arithmetical formula, that of one side equal to the other, which sometimes mutates into a mane of fabric on the head, sometimes into a silky choker around the neck, sometimes into an improvised stole, sometimes into long fingers that follow the wind.

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