logo
There's A Pair of Linen Trousers For Everyone – Here Are 6 Of The Best Styles To Buy Now

There's A Pair of Linen Trousers For Everyone – Here Are 6 Of The Best Styles To Buy Now

Elle21-05-2025
Even if your summer holiday plans are currently more Margate than the Maldives, the recent spell of warm weather calls for lighter layers. A pair of linen trousers will prove a versatile foundation for your wardrobe, being office-appropriate when paired with a smart shirt and strappy sandals or worn open and billowing over swimwear for #OOO days.
As well as being timelessly chic, crisp, high quality linen always looks – and feels – cool, making it ideal for the office commute, as well as balmy days spent strolling in the park, on the beach, or wherever else your summer sojourns take you.
FIND OUT MORE ON ELLE COLLECTIVE
As a chronic over-packer, introducing breezy linen layers has saved me crucial space in my suitcase. Loose trousers, a long-sleeved shirt or a belted dress are easily reworked from a day's lounging by the pool to a smart evening out.
Look to Meghan, Duchess of Sussex who favours the quiet luxury appeal of linen separates. She opted for an oatmeal waistcoat and trousers from St Agni at a work summit in the Hamptons last summer, and Ralph Lauren's luxe silk and linen blend two-piece suit to speak at the Time100 Summit in April (you can shop her exact jacket and trousers now).
Meanwhile, a scan of recent street style reinforces the versatile appeal of linen, where casual wide-leg trousers are paired with a white blouse and tan leather sandals, or worn as an oversized co-ord shrugged on insouciantly at Milan Fashion Week.
Linen trousers with a slimmer leg and flat-front waistband are more suitable for formal settings (team with a matching jacket or last year's ubiquitous waistcoat), while looser, wide-cut styles with a drawstring waist are perfect for off-duty days – pair with a ribbed cotton tank, broderie anglaise blouse or oversized tee.
There's an ideal pair of linen trousers for everyone and every occasion. From high street to premium, work wear or weekend, consider this your ultimate guide to the perennial summer staple.
Forever our style crush, Sienna Miller opted for a blue and white striped linen trouser suit from Ralph Lauren to attend Wimbledon in 2023. With a flattering tie-up waist, she paired it with a navy woven bag, Missoma earrings, black sunglasses and platform heels. Whether you opt for olive, charcoal or classic navy and white, a striped linen trouser adds a preppy accent to any look.
Undoubtedly the colour of the season, a pair of linen trousers rendered in butter yellow brings the item instantly up to date. At Milan Fashion Week infuencer Emilie Joseph paired a pale yellow pinstripe pair with a black blazer, heels and cateye sunglasses for a sharp take on the trend.
Sharing glimpses of a sun-soaked trip on Instagram, Gwyneth Paltrow looked effortless in a pair of loose-fitting white linen trousers, black vest top and aviator shades. With a billowing wide-leg cut and elasticated waistband, the relaxed linen trouser is comfortable, stylish and practical (and key for channelling the spirit of The Talented Mr Ripley or Vicky Cristina Barcelona).
Synonymous with high quality fabrics, sharp tailoring and subtle elegance, buy into the quiet luxury movement with a pair of sleek formal linen trousers. From Loro Piana's polished pleated herringbone style to Ralph Lauren's military-inspired cargo trouser, an expertly cut, well made pair of linen trousers will never date, making it a smart investment for seasons to come. Opt for neutral tones of oatmeal, slate or taupe and combine with a linen waistcoat now and a cashmere knit on cooler days.
Meghan, Duchess of Sussex lent her endorsement to the high street wearing a pair of fitted linen trousers from Zara in the second episode of With Love, Meghan, combining them with the now sold-out Takao sweater from Loro Piana. The right pair of formal linen trousers will make light work of office dressing: look for pleats, a flat-front waistband and structure. Shades of classic white, beige or pale blue have instant appeal – just add an oversized shirt and loafers.
Adding linen to denim increases softness, comfort, durability and structure, so consider updating your jeans collection with a linen pair for summer. The Row has a bleached, mid-rise linen jean for SS25, but there are also worthy options from Reiss, 'S Max Mara and Citizens of Humanity.
Due diligence when laundering will ensure your linen pieces last for years to come. One should check each care label before washing, but as a general rule; hand-wash in lukewarm water and use a mild detergent, or spin on the gentlest machine cycle for a minimal time. Resist the urge to tumble dry and remove linen quickly from the machine to avoid wrinkles settling, then lay items flat on a drying rack or hang to air dry. Press with an iron while still damp, or use the steam function for a sharp finish.
The stiffness of linen fibres is what gives it added ventilation and a favourable cooling effect, but also why it's more prone to folds and wrinkles. While these are part of its charm, if you're wary of looking a little too relaxed, look for a linen blend containing silk, viscose or polyester which will add structure and make the fabric more crease-resistant.
ELLE Collective is a new community of fashion, beauty and culture lovers. For access to exclusive content, events, inspiring advice from our Editors and industry experts, as well the opportunity to meet designers, thought-leaders and stylists, become a member today HERE.
Esther Coombes is the Senior Ecommerce Editor at Harper's Bazaar, ELLE and Esquire, overseeing luxury shopping content across fashion, beauty, travel and homes. She graduated from London College of Fashion with a First Class BA in Fashion Journalism in 2010, and has since worked at Marie-Claire, Easy Living, GLAMOUR and Women's Health.
She held positions as Senior Fashion and Beauty Executive, Senior Lifestyle Executive and Content Lead during her nine years at HELLO! and HELLO! Fashion, creating editorial and branded content across the lifestyle sector and interviewing talent and experts including Lisa Eldridge, Jo Malone and Katie Jane Hughes for print and digital features.
With exacting standards and a critical eye for editing new launches, she enjoys recommending readers best in class products and experiences, be that a glow-giving skin tint, a boutique hotel stay or the perfect slingback stiletto.
In her spare time you can find her at a spin or reformer class or streaming the latest zeitgeisty podcast or television drama. You can follow Esther on Instagram at @esthercoombes.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ralph Lauren's Oak Bluffs collection celebrates historic Black beach community
Ralph Lauren's Oak Bluffs collection celebrates historic Black beach community

Indianapolis Star

timea day ago

  • Indianapolis Star

Ralph Lauren's Oak Bluffs collection celebrates historic Black beach community

Cricket sweaters, patchwork blanket, and distressed baseball caps. Each is part of the new collection called Polo Ralph Lauren for Oak Bluffs, celebrating the historically Black community of Oak Bluffs in Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts. The collection is an evolution of the 2022 collection based on Historically Black Colleges Morehouse and Spelman, who are again partners in the Oak Bluffs collection, and is a part of the company's "Design with Intent" portfolio. "Ralph Lauren as a man, as a brand is sort of the world ambassador to Americana," James Jeter, Creative Director for Polo Men's at Ralph Lauren told USA TODAY. "With that comes this incredible responsibility for us to tell these incredible American stories as fully, as broadly, as accurately as possible." The collection deftly weaves HBCU campus style drawn from Morehouse and Spelman with resort wear that references the historic Black beach town and Black traditions. "It was just very important to tell that story, the multi-faceted, multi-dimensional experience that is the Black experience that also translates into the American experience," Dara Douglas, Product and Brand Lead for Design with Intent, told USA TODAY. It is accompanied by a documentary on the community directed by Cole Brown titled "A Portrait of the American Dream: Oak Bluffs" that debuted on the brand's YouTube page on July 24. "Oak Bluffs' unique history, traditions and sense of community deeply inspire me and speak to what we are all searching for – a place where you can be free, uncontrived, joyful and truly at home," Ralph Lauren, Executive Chairman and Chief Creative Officer of the eponymous preppy stalwart, said in a July 23 press release. Oak Bluffs was once a part of nearby Edgartown and was deemed to be the place "suitable" for Black workers at nearby resorts, according to the National Trust for Historic Preservation. The Oak Bluffs community envisioned by the collection started in earnest when Charles Shearer opened Shearer Cottage in 1912, according to The Root. The Black news outlet described the inn as, "an act of defiance in an America riddled with discrimination and racial segregation, where safe lodging for Black travelers was a rare luxury." "So by default really, Oak Bluffs becomes the place ... for young, educated, affluent African Americans—the politicians and the movie stars." Dr. Elaine Weintraub, historian and co-founder of the Martha's Vineyard African American Heritage Trail, told the Trust. At the heart of Oak Bluffs, according to the Root, is a beach called the Inkwell that served as a place where, "Black folks could swim, sunbathe, and just be, without getting side-eyed or harassed." Weintraub described vacationers to the Inkwell, Shearer Cottage, and Oak Bluffs throughout the decades as a "who's who" including Madame C.J. Walker, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., actress Ethel Waters, and singer Lionel Richie. "Well, I think perhaps I should say what you I think are aware of. Our people are deeply mystical, you might say spiritual and we have a an appreciation for place," Dr. Lawrence E. Carter Sr., the Dean of the Martin Luther King Jr. International Chapel, said in the documentary. "How Martha's Vineyard became Martha's Vineyard has an awful lot to do with traffic, who came through here and by coming through here bequeathed something." Dorothy West, the youngest member of the Harlem Renaissance, said of Oak Bluffs, "I thought there was always summer here" in an interview published by the Martha's Vineyard Museum Oral History Channel. "I think historically it has represented a place where African Americans could be successful, could be around other African-Americans, could share in a culture and a place in the sun and that they'll own and that they'll belong," Weintraub said. Oak Bluffs still holds that same significance today. Netflix's show "Forever", released in March, showcased this on an episode titled "The Vineyard", allowing viewers to see the vibrance and richness that still exists in Oak Bluffs. The 2022 collection was described by Jeter as a "period piece" that drew from the ephemera of Morehouse and Spelman, of which Jeter and Douglas are alumni, from 1920's to the 1960's. "You'll notice that there's this kind of decorum (in the 2022 collection). We leaned a little bit into politics of respectability, which really started such an incredible conversation," Jeter said. He added that imagery for the collection's campaign was "intentionally less serious" and leaned into a multi-generational interpretation of summers on the shore. "Quite frequently people think of the output that comes from the Black experience, whether it's through entertainment, through sports. So you constantly see the Black body in motion, but this notion of rest and relaxation as a space that the black body could occupy I think is quite revolutionary," Douglas said. The collection comes as companies have backed away from concepts labeled DEI following pressure from the Trump administration and other right-wing forces. Jeter and Douglas both pointed to the collection as a part of the company's commitment to widening the brand's view of what is included in "Americana," with James saying "we intended to stick to that."

Ralph Lauren's Oak Bluffs collection celebrates historic Black beach community
Ralph Lauren's Oak Bluffs collection celebrates historic Black beach community

USA Today

time2 days ago

  • USA Today

Ralph Lauren's Oak Bluffs collection celebrates historic Black beach community

Cricket sweaters, patchwork blanket, and distressed baseball caps. Each is part of the new collection called Polo Ralph Lauren for Oak Bluffs, celebrating the historically Black community of Oak Bluffs in Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts. The collection is an evolution of the 2022 collection based on Historically Black Colleges Morehouse and Spelman, who are again partners in the Oak Bluffs collection, and is a part of the company's "Design with Intent" portfolio. "Ralph Lauren as a man, as a brand is sort of the world ambassador to Americana," James Jeter, Creative Director for Polo Men's at Ralph Lauren told USA TODAY. "With that comes this incredible responsibility for us to tell these incredible American stories as fully, as broadly, as accurately as possible." The collection deftly weaves HBCU campus style drawn from Morehouse and Spelman with resort wear that references the historic Black beach town and Black traditions. "It was just very important to tell that story, the multi-faceted, multi-dimensional experience that is the Black experience that also translates into the American experience," Dara Douglas, Product and Brand Lead for Design with Intent, told USA TODAY. It is accompanied by a documentary on the community directed by Cole Brown titled "A Portrait of the American Dream: Oak Bluffs" that debuted on the brand's YouTube page on July 24. "Oak Bluffs' unique history, traditions and sense of community deeply inspire me and speak to what we are all searching for – a place where you can be free, uncontrived, joyful and truly at home," Ralph Lauren, Executive Chairman and Chief Creative Officer of the eponymous preppy stalwart, said in a July 23 press release. Historically Black beach community celebrated by Ralph Lauren Oak Bluffs was once a part of nearby Edgartown and was deemed to be the place "suitable" for Black workers at nearby resorts, according to the National Trust for Historic Preservation. The Oak Bluffs community envisioned by the collection started in earnest when Charles Shearer opened Shearer Cottage in 1912, according to The Root. The Black news outlet described the inn as, "an act of defiance in an America riddled with discrimination and racial segregation, where safe lodging for Black travelers was a rare luxury." "So by default really, Oak Bluffs becomes the place ... for young, educated, affluent African Americans—the politicians and the movie stars." Dr. Elaine Weintraub, historian and co-founder of the Martha's Vineyard African American Heritage Trail, told the Trust. At the heart of Oak Bluffs, according to the Root, is a beach called the Inkwell that served as a place where, "Black folks could swim, sunbathe, and just be, without getting side-eyed or harassed." Weintraub described vacationers to the Inkwell, Shearer Cottage, and Oak Bluffs throughout the decades as a "who's who" including Madame C.J. Walker, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., actress Ethel Waters, and singer Lionel Richie. "Well, I think perhaps I should say what you I think are aware of. Our people are deeply mystical, you might say spiritual and we have a an appreciation for place," Dr. Lawrence E. Carter Sr., the Dean of the Martin Luther King Jr. International Chapel, said in the documentary. "How Martha's Vineyard became Martha's Vineyard has an awful lot to do with traffic, who came through here and by coming through here bequeathed something." Dorothy West, the youngest member of the Harlem Renaissance, said of Oak Bluffs, "I thought there was always summer here" in an interview published by the Martha's Vineyard Museum Oral History Channel. "I think historically it has represented a place where African Americans could be successful, could be around other African-Americans, could share in a culture and a place in the sun and that they'll own and that they'll belong," Weintraub said. Oak Bluffs still holds that same significance today. Netflix's show "Forever", released in March, showcased this on an episode titled "The Vineyard", allowing viewers to see the vibrance and richness that still exists in Oak Bluffs. Oak Bluffs collection intends to broaden view of Black experience The 2022 collection was described by Jeter as a "period piece" that drew from the ephemera of Morehouse and Spelman, of which Jeter and Douglas are alumni, from 1920's to the 1960's. "You'll notice that there's this kind of decorum (in the 2022 collection). We leaned a little bit into politics of respectability, which really started such an incredible conversation," Jeter said. He added that imagery for the collection's campaign was "intentionally less serious" and leaned into a multi-generational interpretation of summers on the shore. "Quite frequently people think of the output that comes from the Black experience, whether it's through entertainment, through sports. So you constantly see the Black body in motion, but this notion of rest and relaxation as a space that the black body could occupy I think is quite revolutionary," Douglas said. The collection comes as companies have backed away from concepts labeled DEI following pressure from the Trump administration and other right-wing forces. Jeter and Douglas both pointed to the collection as a part of the company's commitment to widening the brand's view of what is included in "Americana," with James saying "we intended to stick to that." "We are the leaders. So we look not outside of ourselves, but we look toward our purpose to be the guiding light to the kind of stories that we tell," James said. "The hope is that other corporations or other folks see us as an example."

Ralph Lauren's gorgeous new campaign is fashion advertising done right
Ralph Lauren's gorgeous new campaign is fashion advertising done right

Fast Company

time2 days ago

  • Fast Company

Ralph Lauren's gorgeous new campaign is fashion advertising done right

In Ralph Lauren's latest campaign, Black men, women, and children wear the brand's traditionally preppy clothes against idyllic coastal backdrops. The collection isn't just some sort of woke fantasy of a post-racial America. It's grounded in a very specific history that many Americans aren't familiar with. The setting of this campaign is Oak Bluffs, a section of Martha's Vineyard that has been home to Black communities for more than a hundred years. Oak Bluffs was a haven for educated, middle-class Black families looking for respite in a racist, segregated country. And in this place of relative peace and safety, Black people were able to nurture excellence. Key figures of the Harlem Renaissance and Civil Rights Movement, from Langston Hughes to Martin Luther King Jr., spent time there. President Barack Obama vacationed there with his family and now owns a house in a neighboring town. Ralph Lauren delves into this history in a gorgeous short film full of archival footage created in partnership with Morehouse and Spelman colleges. Directed by Cole Brown, A Portrait of the American Dream is a radical statement in our current cultural climate, when the notions of diversity, equity, and inclusion are under attack. Here is an American brand that understands how to meet the needs of Black consumers, who are expected to spend as much as $70 billion on fashion by 2030, according to McKinsey. Many pieces in this collection are already sold out. Rather than making a superficial effort to get these consumers to spend money, Ralph Lauren is doing the work. The company began partnering with the historically Black Morehouse and Spelman colleges in 2022, working closely with Black academics and cultural critics to understand how students there helped influence preppy fashion as we know it. The Oak Bluff collection goes deeper, reflecting how members of the Black middle class enjoyed their leisure time. A tale of two fashion ads Ralph Lauren's new collection offers a contrast to American Eagle, which has been mired in controversy because of its recent campaign featuring Sydney Sweeney. As my colleague Jeff Beer explains, American Eagle's campaign hinged on the double entendre that Sweeney has great jeans and great genes. In a video, the actress provides a scientific explanation of genetics, describing how genes pass physical traits from parents to offspring. Given that Sweeney is a blond-haired, blue-eyed woman, many people thought this ad reeked of eugenics, the idea that some people have better genes than others and that society should prevent the reproduction of those considered 'unfit.' The outcry about the American Eagle campaign featuring Sweeney has everything to do with the political and cultural climate we're living in. The extreme right—which includes white supremacists and neo-Nazis—is on the rise, while the Trump administration attacks organizations that invest in DEI programs. In this context, it's no surprise that a campaign about how a white woman has good genes evokes the most horrific aspects of racist history. The fact that American Eagle could not foresee how this campaign could go wrong suggests that it did not receive enough feedback from diverse people as it created its ad. Either the company did not have people in the room willing to point out how troubling it was, or the company didn't listen to those who did speak up. Ralph Lauren has taken a very different approach with its design process and marketing in recent years. It doesn't just create clothes that celebrate the diverse strains of American history; it works closely with diverse designers, creatives, and thought leaders. To create the Oak Bluff collection, in addition to historians and cultural experts at the two HBCUs, it partnered closely with the Martha's Vineyard African American Heritage Trail, the Martha's Vineyard Museum, and the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture. It also tapped Black creatives to produce the campaign. In addition to film director Brown, who spent summers on Martha's Vineyard for decades, the campaign features photography by Nadine Ijewere and video footage by Azariah Bjørvig. Consider its 2023 collection, which celebrated Native American style. Ralph Lauren brought in Naiomi Glasses, a seventh-generation Navajo textile artist and designer, to create garments inspired by her culture, and also empowered Glasses to select Native Americans as models, photographers, and creative directors. The company now has an ongoing artist-in-residence program where it brings other artisans preserving heritage crafts to collaborate with Ralph Lauren's creative teams. Good for business To be clear, Ralph Lauren hasn't always been this inclusive. For its classic American style, from preppy fashion to Native American iconograpy, in the past the 60-year-old brand appropriated aesthetics from Black and Indigenous communities, rather than collaborating with them. And the company was slow to bring in models of color for its campaigns. The company is now willing to acknowledge its missteps and blind spots, and is trying to do things right. Its designers have learned that the way to be more inclusive is to partner with diverse creatives, listen closely to their points of view, and give them creative freedom. With all of these collections, Ralph Lauren also gives proceeds back to these communities. This time around, it has partnered with a nonprofit comprised of 100 Black female homeowners on Martha's Vineyard to support historic building restoration on the island. It has devoted $2 million to support scholarships for students at 10 historically Black colleges and universities. Many companies, including Target and Amazon, have backed away from their DEI initiatives in response to Trump's executive orders targeting diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts in both the public and private sectors. So Ralph Lauren deserves credit for having the bravery to continue investing in programs that bring more diversity to its brand. minority by 2045. Black and brown Americans will use their purchasing power to support brands that make an effort to understand them and respond to their needs. And they have long memories. They will hold American Eagle's Sweeney campaign as a mark against the brand for years to come. And they'll remember Ralph Lauren's Oak Bluff campaign the next time they shop for a sweater or dress.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store