HOT OR NOT?

The ‘trendy’ fleece you wear to school drop off is just a hideous 90s throwback – I’m horrified they’re back in style

Read on for our selection of top fleeces on the high street

ONCE the enemy of fashion, fleeces have made a shock comeback – but not everyone’s a fan. 

Here our fashion experts debate whether they are a style crime or a must-have.

Advertisement
Florence Pugh was spotted dashing between Paris fashion shows in a cream- coloured, Borg style Fleece made by PatouCredit: Getty

HOT

Says Abby McHale, Deputy Fashion Editor

I HATE to say it, but I’m a sucker for a trend and have fallen hook, line and sinker for the fleece.

Modern-day It Girl Kaia Gerber wore this orange number out and aboutCredit: GC Images
Model Gigi Hadid is also a fan of the fleeceCredit: BackGrid

An item that was once reserved for walking your dog, pottering in the garden and worn by geography teachers, they were certainly never considered “on trend”.

But, after being embraced by celebrities such as Katie Holmes and Vogue Williams, they have made a comeback. Not only that, they have officially been made cool.

Advertisement

And what’s not to love about them? They are comfy, practical and, most importantly, warm.

Plus, they don’t have to cost a fortune. You can pick one up from Primark for as little as £7.

Marks & Spencer’s latest Goodmove collection features some great patterned varieties, and I love Irish brand 4th Arq’s half-zip fleeces so much that I already have them in multiple colours.

While they may be the answer to all my problems during the winter months, not everyone in my house is a fan.

Advertisement

Most read in Fabulous

TRAGIC END
My ex tortured me then his gf took her life - Kiena's tragedy brought it back
LOST LOVE
Paul Danan revealed health battle that wrecked romances in unpublished interview
worrying trend
Lily Phillips reveals what drove her towards life of X-rated 100-men stunts
SMOOCH BETTER
The 6 signs you're a bad kisser & how to go from 'washing machine' to 'wow'

“How can you get away with wearing something like that?” my boyfriend exclaimed when he saw my teal patterned Columbia fleece. “It looks like the Nineties threw up on it.”

He had a point. This particular fleece does look only one step away from having the dreaded wolf on it.

Primark shoppers go wild for chunky-fleece pyjama sets - and they're so warm fashion fans are even wearing them outside

Sales boost

“It’s fashion,” I clapped back as he shook his head, bemoaning the fact he would never get away with wearing one.

But he is wrong. Fleeces are just as fashionable these days for men as they are for women.

Advertisement

Yes, I am a total cliche. I wear mine mainly at the weekend for pottering around the house, doing my weekly food shop and heading out for a walk.

But so what? They keep me warm, they are easy to throw on and go, and are so comfortable.

I have started to wear them with jeans, for when I need something a bit more “dressed-up” than loungewear.

I may even be tempted to wear one to the office

Abby McHale

I may even be tempted to wear one to the office.

Advertisement

And I’m not alone, because 4th Arq had a 102 per cent boost in revenue year on year thanks to its best-selling half-zip fleeces, which have consistently been selling out since the launch two years ago.

So while some people may not be a fan, I think I look good in a fleece.

And if I remember rightly, my geography teacher was a pretty stylish lady too.

I think I look good in a fleece, says AbbyCredit: Supplied
Advertisement

NOT

Says Clemmie Fieldsend, Fashion Editor

WHEN I think of fleeces, a standout style comes to mind: The wolf.

Vogue Williams has also embraced the lookCredit: Instagram
The dreaded wolf design from NinetiesCredit: Supplied
Advertisement

You know the type — plastered with one of the fearsome beasts howling from a mountainous snowscape, or silhouetted against a moonlit skyline. Hardly screams fashion, does it?

While fleeces might be practical and have come a long, long way (even designer brand Miu Miu has a £1,750 sold-out style) I can’t shake the image of those market-stall designs that littered the high street of my hometown.

Last year, the soft pile came back into the fashion fold when modern-day It Girls Kendall Jenner, Kaia Gerber, Gigi Hadid and the like all started wearing them.

Actress Florence Pugh was spotted, main picture, left dashing between Paris fashion shows in a cream-coloured, Borg style made by French brand Patou, with a £890 price tag.

Advertisement

But while Florence looked good in the deep-piled jacket with matching separates, I couldn’t help thinking: “Sure, in a £900 outfit, skipping through Parisian streets, we’d all look good.’

But unfortunately that is not the reality. Canine fleeces aside, other styles don’t have a fashionable reputation either.

I remember dads and tweens wearing garish, brightly coloured patchwork versions in the 1990s. Or they would be worn by uncool teachers on school trips — and be mocked mercilessly.

Sad attempt

They are also frequently found on the backs of National Trust park rangers and camping enthusiasts. Essential wear for them, of course, but for looking good? Not so much.

Advertisement

To my horror, fleeces are now pitching up on the high street again

Clemmie Fieldsend, Fashion Editor

To my horror, fleeces are now pitching up on the high street again.

Once, only trendy types embraced gorpcore — wearing outdoorsy clothing in urban settings.

But now everyone from M&S to H&M is jumping on the bandwagon.

It has reached its peak, and the cool types have been replaced by the average Joe making it untrendy and over-saturated.

Advertisement

Gen-Zers wear theirs for the 20-step skincare routine, overpriced coffee dates and to the office.

Meanwhile, yummy mummies are slipping them on in a sad attempt to look “cool” on the school run.

Without knowing it, the masses jumping on board what once was a novel trend have reached peak Borg-dom.

Even Jenner and Hadid have stopped wearing them, now that us normal folk have adopted the look in our droves.

Advertisement