Skip to main content

Margiela Inside Outside Coat

MAISON MARGIELA 1990s Vintage wool felt back slit longline Cigarette coat FR38 M
By MM6 Maison Margiela, Maison Martin Margiela
Located in Hong Kong, NT
MAISON MARGIELA 1990s Vintage black wool felt back slit longline Cigarette coat FR38 M Reference
Category

1990s Italian Coats

People Also Browsed

Rare 1980's Thierry Mugler "Show those Legs" Halter Hi Low Evening Dress
By Thierry Mugler
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Circa 1980's Thierry Mugler rare kelly green shantung silk form fitting halter dress. Edgy hi fashion silhouette with strong lean lines; stylish hip pockets. Princess seaming; invert...
Category

1980s French Contemporary Cocktail Dresses

Stunning Claude Montana FW 1990 Archival Runway Coat Sculptural Wool Jacket
By Claude Montana
Located in Berlin, BE
Gorgeous archival Claude Montana wool coat. Presented on the Runwayshow FW1990. High quality soft wool in beautiful dramatic layered shape. The luxurious Design is quite dramatic wit...
Category

1990s Italian Coats and Outerwear

Vivienne Westwood black velvet mini skirt peplum suit, fw 1993
By Vivienne Westwood
Located in London, GB
Vivienne Westwood black velvet skirt suit. Ultra mini pencil skirt paired with a tailored blazer jacket with peplum and pleated vent at the centre back. Fall-Winter 1993
Category

1990s British Skirt Suits

S/S 1985 Valentino Haute Couture Documented Pink Silk Chiffon Bow Strapless Gown
By Valentino, Valentino Garavani
Located in West Hollywood, CA
Presenting this absolutely breathtaking light pink crêpe cady silk Valentino Garavani strapless gown with a daring back décolleté. From the Spring/Summer 1985 Haute Couture collectio...
Category

1980s Italian Evening Gowns

Christian Dior by John Galliano inside-out leather jacket and skirt set, ss 2003
By John Galliano for Christian Dior, Christian Dior
Located in London, GB
▪ Christian Dior skirt suit ▪ Creative Director: John Galliano ▪ Sold by One of a Kind Archive ▪ Spring-Summer 2003 ▪ Inside-out leather jacket with external lining and pockets ▪ Si...
Category

Early 2000s French Suits, Outfits and Ensembles

Jean Paul Gaultier black knitted chenille aran conical breast sweater, fw 1985
By Jean Paul Gaultier
Located in London, GB
Jean Paul Gaultier black chenille aran pullover sweater with wide standing collar, zip fastening at centre-back and signature Gaultier conical breast panels with nipples. Fall-Wint...
Category

1980s Italian Sweaters

Alexander McQueen ivory wool embroidered skirt suit, c. 1997-1999
By Alexander McQueen
Located in London, GB
▪ Alexander McQueen ivory wool skirt suit ▪ Long blazer jacket ▪ Multicoloured embroidery ▪ Ribbon piping ▪ Two front pockets ▪ Matching pencil skirt ▪ IT 42 - FR 38 - UK 10 - US ...
Category

1990s Italian Suits, Outfits and Ensembles

2003 S/S Alexander McQueen Sleeveless Sequin Dress
By Alexander McQueen
Located in Studio City, CA
2003 S/S Alexander McQueen "Irere" collection pale gold sequined sleeveless dress with concealed mother-of-pearl buttons and pleats at the hips, producing a graduated front hem which...
Category

Early 2000s British Evening Dresses

Balenciaga by Nicolas Ghesquière black structured cocktail dress, fw 2008
By Balenciaga
Located in London, GB
▪ Balenciaga black structured cocktail dress ▪ Designed by Nicolas Ghesquière ▪ Asymmetric draped peplum ▪ Slit skirt ▪ Corseted bodice ▪ Padded shoulders ▪ FR 38 - UK 10 - US 6 ▪ ...
Category

Early 2000s French Evening Dresses and Gowns

Vivienne Westwood S/S 1997 grey asymmetric frayed wool jacket and skirt suit
By Vivienne Westwood
Located in Rome, IT
- Grey melange wool skirt suit - Asymmetric fitted blazer jacket - Asymmetric maxi skirt - Frayed trims - New with tags
Category

1990s Suits, Outfits and Ensembles

Jean Paul Gaultier navy pinstripe cotton strapless dress, ss 1995
By Jean Paul Gaultier
Located in London, GB
▪ Jean Paul Gaultier strapless dress ▪ Sold by One of a Kind Archive ▪ Spring-Summer 1995 ▪ Constructed from navy blue cotton with white pinstripes and raw pinked edge ▪ Strapless bo...
Category

1990s Italian Evening Dresses and Gowns

Christian Dior Vintage Black Evening Skirt Suit Fall/Winter 1994 Size 40FR
By Gianfranco Ferré for Christian Dior
Located in Saint Petersburg, FL
Christian Dior - Gianfranco Ferre Vintage Black Evening Skirt Suit Fall/Winter 1994 Top Size 40FR Embellished Skirt Size 38FR
Category

1990s French Skirt Suits

John Galliano Bias S/S 1998 Terrcotta SlipDress Crêpe Backed Satin
By John Galliano
Located in London, GB
- John Galliano Paris - Bias Cut - Slip Dress - Terracota Crêpe Backed Satin - Rouleaux Straps - Bust Darts - Maxi Length - Sold by Mae Vintage London - Spring Summer 1999 Collecti...
Category

1990s French Sheath Dresses

John Galliano Blanche DuBois Clam Dress, ss 1988
By John Galliano
Located in London, GB
▪ Archival John Galliano Clam Dress ▪ Blanche DuBois collection, Spring-Summer 1988 ▪ Sold by One of a Kind Archive ▪ Museum Grade ▪ The skirt crafted from cascading tiers of delicat...
Category

1980s British Evening Dresses and Gowns

Guy Laroche navy blue Oscar dress, ss 2005
By Guy Laroche
Located in London, GB
▪ Guy Laroche navy blue Oscar dress ▪ Designed by Hervé L Leroux (Hervé Leger) ▪ Sold by One of a Kind Archive ▪ Spring-Summer 2005 ▪ Constructed from 2 layers of navy blue viscose j...
Category

Early 2000s French Evening Dresses and Gowns

Gianni Versace herringbone tweed coat with blue fox fur collar, fw 1999
By Gianni Versace
Located in London, GB
▪ Gianni Versace tweed coat ▪ Designed by Donatella Versace ▪ Sold by One of a Kind Archive ▪ Fall-Winter 1999 ▪ Constructed from blue and white herringbone cashmere-wool tweed ▪ D...
Category

1990s Italian Coats and Outerwear

Get Updated with New Arrivals
Save "Margiela Inside Outside Coat", and we’ll notify you when there are new listings in this category.

Maison Martin Margiela for sale on 1stDibs

Belgian designer Martin Margiela (b. 1957) — whose life, career, clothing designs and vintage shoes have become cult-collector obsessions — pushed those who attended his shows outside their comfort zones. In the years following his maison's 1988 debut, he toyed with creative and aesthetic paradoxes that persist in fashion today.

Consider the Spring/Summer 2001 shirt patchworked from vintage clothing labels, or his famous corset dresses made from tailoring dummies, from his Fall/Winter 1997 line. Or his oversize collection for Fall/Winter 2000. In 1992, Margiela told Dépêche Mode magazine, “My clothes appeal to women of a certain mindset rather than of a specific age or physique.”

Born in Genk, Belgium, in 1957, Margiela knew he wanted to be a fashion designer after catching glimpses of Parisian fashion on TV as a child. Although his parents discouraged this career choice as an oddly funny aspiration, Margiela enrolled in the fashion program of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts Antwerp. There, he befriended and graduated a year ahead of the Antwerp Six — the acclaimed group of Belgian fashion designers comprising Dries Van Noten, Walter Van Beirendonck, Ann Demeulemeester, Marina Yee, Dirk Bikkembergs and Dirk Van Saene.

Like many of his contemporaries in the 1980s, Margiela understood Paris fashion but felt a deep resonance with the deconstructed beauty espoused by Japanese designers Yohji Yamamoto and Rei Kawakubo, of Comme des Garçons. Margiela’s fascination with Japan influenced many of his earliest collections and designs, from a dress pieced together from broken plates to his iconic Tabi boots, inspired by the split-toe Japanese worker’s shoe, which dates back to the 15th century. He decided to launch his own line while working for renowned Paris designer Jean Paul Gaultier.

Margiela, Gaultier has often stated, was his best assistant. Even then, the 2019 film Martin Margiela: In His Own Words suggests, he was acutely aware of the widening gulf between the art and the business of fashion.

Margiela’s debut show was nothing short of spectacular. Set in a packed Café de la Gare in the still-seedy Marais district, it was also scandalous to the Parisian fashion set of the time. The designer tore up the conventions of contemporary couture presentations, most notably having his models, plucked from the streets and wearing ink-blotted Tabis, wend their way through the crowd. The show redefined the concept of the runway in a way that would later inspire such designers as Alexander McQueen and Demna Gvasalia.

While the notoriously private designer retired from fashion in 2009, for many Maison Martin Margiela collectors, his pieces capture the irreverence of the postwar, post-punk late 1980s and ’90s. Katy Rodriguez, cofounder of the cult vintage fashion shop Resurrection, is among those who felt a connection to Margiela’s clothing in the subliminal challenges it posed to the time’s beauty norms.

“Growing up in San Francisco and coming out of the end of punk rock, not wanting to be objectified, not wanting to be seen as a sexual object, not wanting your value to be just because you’re pretty — all those clothes played into all of that,” she says. “It really was a reflection of the kind of world the young people I knew at the time wanted to live in.”

Find vintage Maison Martin Margiela boots, evening dresses, jackets and more on 1stDibs.

Fashion of the 1990s

For fashion lovers, the 1990s have become associated with styles adopted by today’s supermodels and influencers, who never wear the same thing twice. And because fast fashion didn’t yet exist, the design associated with 1990s fashion — vintage '90s handbags, clothing and accessories — has a quality appreciated by the millennial generation: authenticity.

If there was one concept unifying fashion in the 1990s, it was the lean silhouette. “Fashion is a game of proportion,” Alexander Fury wrote in the New York Times in 2016. “Narrow-shouldered and narrow-hipped, the ’90s were skinny.”

If it takes a practiced eye to identify that single concept, that’s because in truth, ’90s fashion was many things to many people. After the 1980s era of strong-shouldered working women, glossy aerobicized bodies and Madonna, fashion branched out.

The industry gained momentum from big-money relaunches of the great Paris houses Dior, Givenchy and Balenciaga, rescued at long last from the constraints of licensing. Japan and Belgium gave fashion new avant-garde ideas to play with. From America came denim, minimalism, '90s grunge fashion and hip-hop. From Italy came sex appeal. And Prada.

For the colorful corsets of her 1990 Portrait collection, audacious British designer Dame Vivienne Westwood drew on 18th-century oil paintings — her models donned the pearl choker necklaces that have become a social media star and a favorite of influencers and fashion lovers all over the world. For a jacket-and-shorts suit from her Fall/Winter 1996–97 Storm in a Teacup line, the designer used the extreme asymmetry of a tartan mash-up to confront, according to Westwood, “the horror of uniformity and minimalism.”

“The ethos of the time was, you could have style, you could be into all kinds of cool stuff. It wasn’t about money, it wasn’t about status,” says Katy Rodriguez, cofounder of Resurrection. In contrast, “our last 10 years have seen the domination of nonstop luxury, money and status.”

Vintage 1990s Chanel bags, for example, are among the most prized of the brand’s offerings — at Newfound Luxury, proprietor L. Kiyana Macon has "clients who only buy ’90s Chanel because they recognize that it is the best quality.” 

Things were different in the ’90s, and the difference is reflected in the clothes. Pull up any recent “How to Do the 1990s” fashion article (or look at photos of current supermodels Gigi, Kendall and Bella), and you’ll see iconic '90s outfits — knee socks, cardigans, fanny packs, fishnet stockings, slip dresses, flannel shirts and combat boots.

Rodriguez has recently noticed something similar happening. Before COVID, customers searched 1990s stock “for very sexy Galliano, Dior, Cavalli — that kind of thing,” she explains, noting that just a few months ago, “people were posting [on social media] the poshest things they could.” Now, in the age of shutdown, “that would just look out of touch.”

Instead, people are looking for “things that are cool but also easy and comfortable, not necessarily super-luxe,” Rodriguez continues. They’re “heading back to the more avant-garde, anti-fashion designers, like Helmut Lang, [Martin] Margiela and [Ann] Demeulemeester.”

Late designer Franco Moschino shocked and titillated the ’80s fashion elite with his whimsical, irreverent parodies of bourgeois finery. Whether emblazoning a sober blazer with smiley faces or embellishing a skirt suit with cutlery, Moschino rendered high style with a hearty wink. He famously said, “If you can’t be elegant, at least be extravagant” — words that, with all due respect to Susan Sontag, epitomize the essence of camp.

Vintage Moschino pants, jackets and other '90s Moschino garments remain so bold and fresh today that even the house's former creative director, Jeremy Scott, drew on the brand's past and the pop culture of the decade for his debut collection in 2014.

Find vintage 90s dresses, skirts, sweaters and other clothing and accessories on 1stDibs — shop Thierry Mugler, Miuccia Prada, Jean Paul Gaultier and more today.

Finding the Right coats-outerwear for You

There is a stylish garment for anywhere in the universe, and on 1stDibs, finding the right vintage and designer coats and outerwear doesn’t have to feel like a journey to the ends of the earth.

Outerwear includes many types of garments aside from the standard coat. From capes, gilets, jackets and cloaks to raincoats and kimonos, fashion designers have long been preparing us for the elements, and outerwear in general has changed and evolved significantly over time.

A lot of the coat styles in our closets, such as the durable Navy-inspired peacoat, were popularized by soldiers who battled aggressive climes in their regulation field jackets and parkas — indeed, keeping troopers comfortable guided the design of the military surplus garments that have often become buzzy fashion trends. Even today, owing to the likes of Burberry, a luxury fashion house that is among the originators of the trench coat worn by British officers during World War I, the trench remains a timeless style, now available in a range of colors that can be worn throughout the year.

While women in late 1700s England donned an adaptation of a men’s jacket called a spencer — the likeness of which could be spotted in Ralph Lauren’s ready-to-wear collections hundreds of years later — designers hadn’t widely been crafting outerwear specifically for women. Generally, the outerwear of choice for the fashionable, well-heeled lady prior to the 1800s usually consisted of capes, shawls and stoles. By the mid-1800s, women were wearing overcoats with multiple layered collars popularized by men (often called a Garrick coat in England), and as women entered the workforce during the 1920s, hemlines climbed, jewelry was prominent and fashion conventions were broken across the board.

Thankfully, the 20th century’s tradition of challenging the norm continues steadfast in today’s outerwear fashions. Contemporary designers certainly find inspiration in 1960s and 1970s coats by Pierre Cardin, Yves Saint Laurent and Bonnie Cashin, but unisex options abound in modern creations that take both function and style into account. Find what inspires you in the full range of vintage and designer coats and outerwear available for sale on 1stDibs.

Questions About Maison Martin Margiela
  • 1stDibs ExpertApril 5, 2022
    The upscale sporty style of Maison Martin Margiela sneakers gives them versatile styling possibilities. While how you wear them is up to personal preference, they can be dressed up with a breezy sundress, paired with classic jeans and a tee, or dressed down with joggers and a tank. Shop a selection of Maison Margiela sneakers on 1stDibs.
  • 1stDibs ExpertApril 5, 2022
    The key to spotting fake Maison Martin Margiela products is quality. The Maison Margiela brand is known for designer-level craftsmanship and materials. An authentic Maison Margiela product should have neat, even stitching, a crisp logo and high level of attention to detail. Shop an array of expertly vetted Maison Margiela pieces from top boutiques on 1stDibs.
  • 1stDibs ExpertApril 5, 2022
    Maison Martin Margiela, now simply called Maison Margiela, is a French fashion house founded in 1988. It was first founded by Belgian designer Martin Margiela and takes inspiration from avant-garde styling. On 1stDibs, find a range of authentic Maison Margiela pieces.
  • 1stDibs ExpertApril 5, 2022
    John Galliano is currently creative director of the French fashion house Maison Margiela, previously called Maison Martin Margiela. In the past, he has been the creative director for Givenchy and Christian Dior. Browse a range of expertly vetted Maison Margiela pieces from top sellers on 1stDibs.