Dracocopede Printed Silk Bias Dress
Nicol & Ford’s staple draped cowl-neck bias dress is reimaged in a snake-skin printed silk used for “Shed”, Look 14 of Nicol & Ford’s THORN presentation at Australian Fashion Week 2024.
Articulated with a custom-finished chain halter for size adjustability, this classic bias silhouette hits all the right places.
Made to order in Sydney from sustainably sourced deadstock textiles
Delivery from 18th October, 2024
Vincent of Beauvais (c. 1190-1264) describes the Dracocopede as a vast serpent creature with the head, face and breasts of a woman, building from Christian mythologies associating women and snakes as sources of temptation for the self-destruction of mankind.
Nicol & Ford’s staple draped cowl-neck bias dress is reimaged in a snake-skin printed silk used for “Shed”, Look 14 of Nicol & Ford’s THORN presentation at Australian Fashion Week 2024.
Articulated with a custom-finished chain halter for size adjustability, this classic bias silhouette hits all the right places.
Made to order in Sydney from sustainably sourced deadstock textiles
Delivery from 18th October, 2024
Vincent of Beauvais (c. 1190-1264) describes the Dracocopede as a vast serpent creature with the head, face and breasts of a woman, building from Christian mythologies associating women and snakes as sources of temptation for the self-destruction of mankind.
Nicol & Ford’s staple draped cowl-neck bias dress is reimaged in a snake-skin printed silk used for “Shed”, Look 14 of Nicol & Ford’s THORN presentation at Australian Fashion Week 2024.
Articulated with a custom-finished chain halter for size adjustability, this classic bias silhouette hits all the right places.
Made to order in Sydney from sustainably sourced deadstock textiles
Delivery from 18th October, 2024
Vincent of Beauvais (c. 1190-1264) describes the Dracocopede as a vast serpent creature with the head, face and breasts of a woman, building from Christian mythologies associating women and snakes as sources of temptation for the self-destruction of mankind.