Dictionary
leather
verb
To cover with leather.
Exact(8)
There are poodle hoodies for £4.99, faux pink leather dog boots for £5.99 and a range of doggie polo shirts and pullovers.
The Iris sandal, handwoven in leather macramé, the classic tan shade set off by a cascade of yellow, red, green and blue resin beads, is what every modern-day Apfel will be wearing in Ibiza this summer.
When I walked out in smoke, dressed like a tart in leather, the audience screamed so much that I couldn't hear the backing track and I was completely out of key.
Yanis Varoufakis arrived in Downing Street yesterday in black jeans, a mauve open-necked shirt that was not tucked in, and the sort of leather coat Putin might wear on a bear hunt.
Others are cheaper but you have to source your leather.
Sewing leather is immensely satisfying; it feels like an exercise from a bygone era, as if I'm sewing gauntlets in the 16th century.
When Wang says mildly he wanted to do knitwear, note that what this meant on the catwalk was a patent leather coat embossed to give a trompe l'oeil cable-knit effect, a modern take on chainmail, and Gisele Bündchen closing the show in a round-shouldered sweater with a necklace of crystals knitted into its structure.
A far better bet for cut-price chic is to forget the designer label altogether and try the multitude of high-quality leather goods stores.
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