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Monday, December 7, 2020

Hermès Plissé Scarf

Hermès silk scarves have been made since 1937.  The plissé scarves first appeared in 1980 in an attempt to appeal to a younger crowd.  These are the very same regular scarves, but with pleats ironed into place.  ("plissé" would be pronounced "Please A")

These tend to be stored curled.  When new, they come in a round box.

One of the forums I read said, in May 2012:
 "you can send every silk twill carre (lately dry-cleaned or new) to your H store and it will be pleated in Paris. I did this often without any problems. Last week I received a plisse from my H store and I paid 44 euro for pleating. "

This scarf is Qu'importe Le Flacon
You can see my blog of this scarf in blue here.
You can see that pleating completely changes the look of the scarf.  The top scarf in red is pleated.  The bottom scarf in blue is standard silk.

Greytstore describes the scarf:
"Flacons" aka "Qu'importe Le Flacon Pourvu qu' on ait L'ivresse...." designed by French artist, Catherine Baschet, and first issued by Hermès in 1988. Her design carries the subtitle “Qu’importe le flacon Pourvu qu' on ait L'ivresse...." or "no matter the bottle, as long as one gets intoxicated" which is a line from a poem by early 19th century, romantic period, French poet and playwright, Alfred de Musset (b.1810-d.1857) about his lover, French female writer and early feminist, Armandine Aurore Lucille Dupin (b. 1804-d.1876) who wrote under the nom de plume of George Sand.

While this line referred to both Armandine and drinking absinthe and wine, the artist cleverly substituted perfume flacons full of heady, intoxicating aromas in lieu of bottles of intoxicating wines and absinthes. As the design was described in the Hermès 1988/1989 Fall/Winter Catalogue...."Perfume bottles from around the world adorn 'Flacons.' The flacons of history lie side by with the flacons of Hermès: the long, elegant bottle of Calèche, Hermès' first perfume for women; the pure lines of the 'Amazon H' bottle; the curves of the horse-bit inspired 'Parfum d'Hermès.' Our artist added whimsical touches to the exquisite detail of the scarf--look at the perfume spilling from unstoppered flacons!"





If you're looking for ideas to tie a plissé scarf, check out maitai's blog.  

~~~

The next scarf is Feux de Route.  This was designed by Caty Latham in 1971.  It shows carriage lamps.





To see the other Hermès scarves I have blogged, click here.


1 comment:

R. said...

I like the unpleated better...