Outfit V

In the black-and-white photograph, a person stands on a concrete floor in front of a rough wall. They hold a long wooden board in one hand, angled diagonally upward. Light strikes the figure strongly from above, creating sharp contrasts and emphasizing the movement of the fabric.
The outfit consists of two garments: a top and trousers, both made from silk. The material is light and fluid, responding sensitively to movement and light.
The top wraps asymmetrically around the body. One shoulder remains bare, while on the other side the fabric falls in broad, soft planes. The form appears to emerge from one continuous piece that twists around the torso without clearly separated sections.
The trousers are long and loose, falling straight toward the floor. The fabric forms long, soft lines that follow the movement of the body. Here too, the construction appears as a unified surface shaped around the legs.
Printed onto the silk is a bold, high-contrast pattern. It consists of large organic and linear forms that resemble hand-drawn charcoal marks. The pattern is not even or repetitive, but lively and irregular, as though a drawing had been transferred directly onto the fabric.
The pattern continues seamlessly from one garment to the other, visually connecting the top and trousers. It reinforces the idea of the clothing surface as a single unified whole and introduces another layer to the work: not only material, but also image and gesture.
The figure's pose — one leg slightly forward and the torso gently twisted — causes the fabric to move and the pattern to unfold in different directions. The overall impression is both light and powerful: softly draping material combined with a graphic, almost painterly surface.
The photograph was taken by Paula Lehto, and the model is Jenni Jokela.
