SKU: 13428034965
women halter dress

women halter dress Women's Guayabera Halter Dress, Linen-Cotton, 4 Pockets Medium / ROYAL

Sale price$26.21 Regular price$29.12
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Size: 4

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Description

women halter dress Women's Guayabera Halter Dress, Linen-Cotton, 4 Pockets Medium / ROYALDescription A guayabera reimagined as a halter dress. Cut in a 55% linen, 45% cotton blend with the signature details that earn the guayabera name: alforzas pleats running down the front, a four pocket layout, and a full button down placket from collar to hem. Available in 3 colorways. Why You'll Love It Authentic guayabera detailing Four functional pockets and narrow alforzas pleats carried from the classic shirt into a feminine halter cut Cooler

Description

A guayabera reimagined as a halter dress. Cut in a 55% linen, 45% cotton blend with the signature details that earn the guayabera name: alforzas pleats running down the front, a four-pocket layout, and a full button-down placket from collar to hem. Available in 3 colorways.

Why You'll Love It

  • Authentic guayabera detailing — Four functional pockets and narrow alforzas pleats carried from the classic shirt into a feminine halter cut
  • Cooler than cotton alone — The 55% linen content pulls heat and moisture away from skin, so the dress breathes through hot afternoons
  • Halter neck, button-down front — Open shoulders with a polished placket that reads resort-refined, not swimwear-casual
  • Sheath cut that moves — Skims the hip, walks easily in flat sandals or a low block heel
  • Machine washable — Cold cycle on delicate, line dry. No trip to the dry cleaner
  • 3 colorways — White, red, and blue. Clean solids that work across resort, dinner, and travel wardrobes

Fabric & Construction

This dress is cut from a 55% linen, 45% cotton blend that pairs two natural fibers for a specific warm-weather job. The linen does the thermal work. Hollow flax fibers pull moisture off skin and release it into the air, which is why linen feels cooler than cotton at the same temperature. The 45% cotton softens the hand from the first wear and stabilizes the weave, so the dress holds shape through repeated washing rather than growing slack the way a 100% linen piece can. The blend also drapes more fluidly than straight linen and resists the deep creasing linen purists accept as a trade-off.

Construction is where the dress earns the guayabera name. Alforzas pleats, the narrow vertical tucks that signal authentic guayabera tailoring, run down both sides of the front placket. The four-pocket layout carries through: two chest pockets and two patch pockets at the hip, each topped with a matching button. The halter keeps shoulders bare while a full button-down placket runs from collar to hem. The collar is a flat notched camp style that sits correctly without pressing.

How to Style It

  • Resort daytime: White dress with leather slides and a straw tote for a beach-club lunch, or layer a cover-up from the women's guayabera shirts range on cool mornings.
  • Dinner reservation: Red or blue with a low block heel and gold jewelry for a coastal restaurant or hotel patio.
  • Layered travel look: Wear the dress open over linen pants and a fitted tee for a relaxed airport-to-arrival outfit.
  • Weekend elevated: Espadrille wedges, minimal bag, sunglasses. One piece handles brunch through market afternoon.

Details

  • Style: Halter button-down dress, guayabera-inspired
  • Fabric: 55% linen, 45% cotton
  • Pattern: Solid
  • Collar: Notched camp collar
  • Neckline: Halter
  • Sleeve: Sleeveless
  • Length: Knee
  • Silhouette: Sheath
  • Fit: Relaxed, true to size
  • Pockets: Four (two chest, two hip)
  • Detailing: Alforzas pleats, full button-down front
  • Colors: White, Red, Blue
  • Sizes: S, M, L, XL, XXL
  • SKU: NC-4996

Fit & Care

Relaxed sheath cut that runs true to size for most frames. The halter sits naturally at the collarbone without pulling, and the knee-length hem falls at or just above the knee for most heights between 5'2" and 5'9". If between sizes, size down for a closer cut or up for additional room through the hip.

  • Machine wash cold on delicate with like colors
  • Line dry to preserve shape and minimize shrinkage
  • Warm iron or quick steam restores a crisp finish on linen-cotton

Shipping & Returns

  • Free U.S. shipping over $150
  • 30-day returns on unworn, tagged items
  • Easy exchanges with responsive support
Shipping Notes
  • Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
  • Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
  • Delivery to the USA:
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  • If time is of the essence, please consider selecting expedited delivery for faster service.
Exchange/Return Notes
  • We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
  • To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
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SKU: 13428034965

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A.
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 4
Why do black people . . .
Format: Hardcover
I purchased this book because I had many questions I wanted answered. Most of them were questions of "Why?". My biggest question was why we as black people have so many unhealthy habits in how we treat each other. As a young African American male who was raised by his mother in a predominantly white suburban area, I wanted to know why, when I encountered other black youth in more urban areas, they would tell me I "talk white." What is "talking white?" Basically, talking white means I was talking like I have an education. Why do so many members of the black community (those without an education) reject me for valuing education? Why is it that when one black person fidns a way out of the ghetto, it seems the whole neighborhood, church included, condems that person for leaving "his/her people" and wanting to live in the suburbs with the whites? Why don't we support one-another in this society that has always held us from achieving our full potential? I wanted to learn why we seem to have no clue of who we are, and so many of us, young and old, strive to "prove" we are "black enough." So talking a certain way makes us black? Or is it eating certain foods that makes us "black"? Listening to only certain kinds of music? We lack a firm sense of cultural identity. We take rebellious pride in being at the bottom, and equate success with "whiteness." We denounce the achievements of any black person and ostracize him from the community. We work to pressure our own to stay at the bottom. In this very interesting book, the author, Dr. Joy Degruy Leary, proposes a number of explanations for why the African American community has developed these and other unhealthy cultural habits. Leary examines this very real "crabs in the barrel" mentality, as well as many other self-destructive habits which plague the black community. Leary establishes a diagnoses, and calls it Post-Traumatic Slave Syndrome. Leary presents a very strong argument that the behaviors are all symptoms that have been passed down through the generations of African American people from the dawn of the trans-atlantic slave trade to today. Leary uses her own observations to support her theory of Post-Traumatic Slave Syndrome. This book is a very thoughtful read. The reason I give this work only four stars is because I truly feel that Leary's argument would have been much more affirmed and effective if she had included a visual timeline to help the reader to better understand the timeframes and chain of events in history discussed in the book. The argument also would have been more effective if the author spent more time on each point. At times it seems she's just getting started before summarizing all that was just said and moving on. Scholarly sources are cited and research is used, but the book does not explore any one study or statistic in great depth. It is a fast read.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 16, 2012
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ez2laf
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 5
America's Biggest Lie
African Americans have been brutalized beyond imagination. Then told that they were the ones that were less than human. It boggles the mind. The whites beat, burned, skinned, lynched, mutilated and murdered African Americans at will. And these same whites believe (to this day) that this is their god given right. Even worst was the emotional and intellectual scars left from the lies that were told. If I didn't see the consequence of this everyday, I would think someone was lying to me: Some kind of Cosmic joke. The white criminals are the heroes and the African victims are the villains. This cannot actually be real. But it is. Whites stripped the Africans of their names, religions, dignity, culture and their humanity. Then called them less than human. This slight of hand is beyond comprehension. The funniest part is when I hear Whites yell to blacks "go back to Africa." This is tantamount to kidnapping someone, tying them up, putting them in your basement then yelling at them to get out of your house. Insane. This has been going on for 400 years. Wow. And America thinks it the moral leader of the free world. I have to pinch myself. This has to be a dream.... or a nightmare. The book opened my eyes.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on August 18, 2017
S
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Sherri
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
I have to step up as a parent..
Format: Hardcover
The book is a little bigger than what I realized. I must not have paid a attention to that because I did a quick buy. But thats not a bad thing it is a really nice coffee table book the pictures are great. I skimmed the book and it has some wonderful information. I wanted to have something to catch the attention of my GenAlpha son so he can learn about our history the school did a horrible job this year with learning Black history which is American history. Plan to get the study guide to help me talk about this with my son. Given the time we are living in I need to do better with informing and guiding him with facts. Because of my school and parents I learned a some of this growing up but the schools are barely teaching anything past MLK, Malcolm X or Harriet Tubman!
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Reviewed in the United States on April 29, 2026
B
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2BMSALG😎😎😎
Pawtucket, US
★★★★★ 5
Must have👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
Format: Hardcover
Excellent hardcover and a must to a collection of history that many may not know. Take the journey that many will never understand 👏🏾💜🙌🏾
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Reviewed in the United States on April 28, 2026
D
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Dglana
Boise, US
★★★★★ 5
a beautiful important history book
Format: Hardcover
What an amazing book! This book is the version with incredible photos as part of the history story. I couldn't believe how vivid this was when I opened up the book. I'd been wanting the book for a while, because so little is told of the enslaved people's history in this country. It is important for us to understand our past, and without books like this one we do not have the full story. Thank you to the authors who put together this beautiful book.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 22, 2025

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