The shape carried over into most of her outerwear, which was a sensation as usual, with generous tufts of fur peeking out from the collars, cuffs, and sleeves of wool and tweed coats. And she also used it for softer pieces like scarf-print dresses and knitwear. Abe sliced and diced every last shred of tradition out of her fisherman sweaters, adding cable-knit sleeves to a shirtdress that retained the masculine proportion of a man's flannel shirt or combining them with cotton poplin to create flirtier numbers.