Outfit Formula: Coat Column

Seattle was frozen for most of Christmas and New Year, which is not the norm. It’s been wet, grey and bitterly cold, and I’ve been wrapping up. I hauled out my super warm navy Canadian puffer from Soia & Kyo, Uniqlo HEATTECH undies, cream Sperry snow boots, an assortment of beanies, and my red gloves and Furla. Since I wore woolly turtlenecks, there was no need to wear a scarf because the coat zips up high and covers my neck. I felt comfortable, fab, and casually pulled together walking Yorkies Sam and Jo in the ice and snow, and running errands on foot. No driving.

I wore both pairs of dark blue cuffed jeans throughout the deep freeze, which created a column of navy with the puffer. The cuffed jeans are a practical length. Long enough to cover my snow boots and toasty socks, and short enough to stay dry. A crossbody bag is essential for city life, and mine matched my gloves. Beanies prevent earache, and I matched mine to the navy and cream in my outfit. Or I threw in a mismatched bright beanie like citron or orange. My light blue specs feel adequately “neutral” with my outfits.

Here are the exact items from my wardrobe:

I like to wear columns of neutrals or non-neutrals, where the bottoms match the coat or jacket, and sometimes my top and footwear too. I can do this with red, turquoise, orange, cream, and navy at the moment because I have the bottoms to match the coats. In time I’d like to create columns of colour with citron, shocking pink, blush, light blue, and burgundy.

Meanwhile, here are some Wintery columns in colours that are easier than wearing brights from head to toe. Since the point is to match bottoms and coat, colours like black, grey, teal, navy, and earth tones are easier column creations.

1. Navy

Create a column of navy by combining dark blue jeans or trousers with a navy coat. Complete the look with black or navy footwear. You could wear a black or navy sweater under the coat, and add a navy or black scarf, hat and gloves to amplify the column. Add a black or navy bag, and wear toasty socks. Or do what I do, which is create a column of navy with jeans and coat, and add another neutral and some colour for the rest of the outfit components.

Navy

2. Cinnamon

Create a column with a cinnamon pair of bottoms, sweater, and topper. Add footwear and accessories that work with the outfit. If matching the cinnamons is tricky, mismatch them a little, or create a column with low-contrast earth tones. The bootcut silhouette looks fresh, and very ‘90s.

Cinnamon

3. Black

Create a column of black by combining black jeans or pants with a black coat and boots. Here, the cream sherpa lining breaks up the black with a nice bit of classic contrast. Cream boots that match the sherpa would work well too. Add Winter accessories in black, another neutral, or pop of colour.

Black

4. Teal

Create a column by combining teal bottoms with a matching teal coat. The top can be a shade, tint, or tone of teal, or a pattern that has some teal in it. Black boots and bag are a great addition especially if the teal is dark, and the pattern has some black in it too. Add jewellery, eyewear, headgear and watch as desired.

Teal

Style Goals for 2022

Style goals can be general or specific, seasonal or annual, abstract or quantified, and simple or complicated. Remember that they can be changed at any time, so don’t overthink the process. You can set as few as one goal, and try to stick to it. Some people do well setting two sets of goals because their styles differ greatly in hot and cold weather. 

Some people set rigid goals, while others prefer a looser approach. For some, setting style goals is an intuitive and incremental process of fine-tuning the sartorial fabness that they accomplished the previous year. For others, it requires time, patience, some soul-searching, and an in-depth analysis of the internal and external factors that affect their style.

I like to set style goals in January because they serve as a helpful frame of reference as I edit and review my closet, add new items, create outfits, and evolve my look. I do a pretty good job of remembering what they are but glance over them from time to time too. I hold myself accountable by sharing my progress mid year and at the end of the year.

Reflecting on my style at the end of 2021 crystalized my thoughts and set me up for effective goal setting right around now. My approach to style and wardrobe management is working so there’s no need to fix anything specific. I love my wardrobe, and I’m grateful for daily outfits that spark joy, energize me, and keep me optimistic. So this year is about continuation, fine-tuning my style strategies, and focussing on some specific purchases.

I’m in a goal setting mood this year so there are more goals on my list than usual. We’ll see how it goes.

1. Amp Up Authenticity

I live in a city where casual, neutral clothing is the norm, yet it is inauthentic for me to dress this way. I am dressy, more preppy than grungy, love bright colours, and I’m not athletic. My style moniker is “Urban Polish” and I’m keeping it that way. It’s important to me to create daily outfits that are refined, pretty, bold, fluidly tailored, polished, comfortable, dressy, practical, and more colourful than the norm. That feels authentic to my style so that’s what I am sticking with. And when your style feels authentic-to-you, it’s easy to manage, maintain and enjoy.

2. Stay True to My Style Aspirations

I want to wear outfits that are Modern, Crisp, Retro, Playful and Dressy. There is no need to achieve all five adjectives for every outfit. Three or four are close enough.

Modern, because I enjoy injecting a few carefully chosen hot-off-the-press trends into my seasonal look. That’s part of why fashion is fun, keeps things fresh, and it works well with my line of work.

Crisp, because I love wearing shades of white and clear brights, and have a strong need to create a fresh, professional and tidy appearance.

Retro, because of my fondness for fashion from the ‘60s, ‘70s and ‘80s, but remixing retro sensibilities with a good dose of current.

Playful, because it’s become important to me to wear outfits that are or have soft, amusing, sentimental, nostalgic and fun elements. This also reminds me to not take the fashion and style world too seriously, and to do my own thing.

Dressy, because super casual does not make me happy.

3. Prioritize brands that work

I tend to do best with certain brands, so unless things change, it’s wise to keep purchasing from them. Furthermore, I successfully rekindled my affection with some old brands that I had great success with in the past, but that fell off my radar. They are back on my ‘brands that work for me’ list. Purchasing from these brands means that there is a good chance that the fit, fabric, colour, silhouette, price point, and quality is right for my style. This keeps my style focussed and creates easier wardrobe additions. It’s worth remembering that trying new-to-me brands is not necessarily a good thing, especially when I’m having a good run with tried-and-tested brands.

3. Make manageable, sustainable and ethical wardrobe decisions

I am committed to making the most sustainable and ethical wardrobe decisions that I can manage. There are compromises, but wardrobe items have to be right to work over time, which is a sustainability goal in itself. As far as possible, I will continue to refresh my style from designers and retailers that are committed to sustainable and ethical practices, and my intention is to keep wardrobe items for as long as I can. Luckily, most of the brands that I am prioritizing in goal #3 are producing more sustainably and ethically over time.

4. Express my style through my favourite colours and patterns

My style is colour-rich with a good dose of neutral blue and white. I want to continue wearing my signature sour brights, blush pink, my shades of blue, lots of white, and a very careful sprinkling of earth tones. I want to continue remixing the colours in my wardrobe in bold and new ways, but I also want to wear monochromatic and tonal outfits in non-neutrals more frequently.

For patterns I’m sticking to the classics like stripes, dots, plaids, checks, horse prints, and some florals because I don’t tire of them. That said, I need to tame my gung-ho pattern gene because there is a LOT of pattern in my wardrobe. I will be focussing on solids for a while, but patterned dresses and skirts are fine.

5. Continue exploring the world of fun and practical pants

I LOVE wearing dressy and casual pants in solids and patterns. I enjoy wearing them as much as trendy blue and white jeans. Pants in checks and plaids have become signature to my style and I reach for them as much as solid pants. Going forward though, I want to flesh out my solid capsule of non-denim bottoms and give patterns a break.

6. Continue adding elegant-to-me touches to my style

My custom-made pearl jewellery makes me feel more elegant, as does wearing midi dresses, midi skirts, dressy pants, structured handbags, fluidly tailored silhouettes with ease and movement, refined footwear (even when they’re fashion sneakers!), well-groomed hands and feet, maintaining healthy skin, and doing my hair and make-up each day.

My very short COVID pixie made me feel more elegant, edgy, and polished than its longer versions. Exposing my ears makes me feel alluring. That said, I’m growing out my hair because I miss my longer waves and want a little extra to play with. My hair will be short, but not as short. I might darken the blonde a bit too. I’m not sure how I’ll feel when my hair project is complete. But I’m persevering with the growing-out stage because I’m curious about how I’ll feel with longer hair. I’m enjoying the adventure, and am looking forward to the change.

7. Milk my signature style

That means short hair, equal parts classic and trendy, an emphasis on the “soft, playful and pretty”, tailored fluidity, statement eyewear and dressy handbag, natural make-up, white pearls, white footwear, white jeans, red pants, lots of colour, classic patterns, hectic colour combinations, monochromatic bright from head-to-toe, some pattern mixing, light neutrals, dark blue, flat footwear, fashion sneakers, and no nail polish.

8. Specific Goals

Here are some very specific things I’d like to do this year:

  • Refresh my capsule of solid separates
  • No more olive. Although olive matches my eyes, it doesn’t make me happy
  • Add crisp white Summer tops
  • Add light blue wardrobe items to match new light blue specs
  • Re-evaluate tired knitwear and replace as needed
  • Embellish my new horsey capsule
  • Find comfortable Summer shoes that go the distance, but are neither sneakers nor sandals
  • Add another dressy pants suit
  • Put new prescriptive lenses into old sunnies, or commit to new frames for my sunglasses.
  • Replenish basics like bras and panties
  • Replace my very old navy military coat
  • Build onto my blush pink complement
  • Embellish my high Summer capsule, because Seattle Summers are getting hotter
  • Fill a Spring and Summer jacket wardrobe hole
  • Add more flowing, fun midi skirts to my skirt capsule
  • Summer dress additions are always welcome!

Over to you. Have you thought about your style goals for 2022? Many of the YLF forum members have thought about theirs, and their posts have been a pleasure to read over the last few weeks. Please share your style goals in the comments section, even if you’ve already shared them on the forum. They will be and interesting and aspirational to others, and I look forward to hearing them.

A Word and Colour for 2022

Every January, YLF forum member and friend Laura and I choose a word and colour to help us set our priorities for the year. Laura has been doing this for years with great success. This is the fourth year I’m adopting the tradition, which I’ve found enjoyable and motivating. I love the simplicity of having a single word to keep top of mind, and the discipline of a specific colour that I’ve prioritized. Sometimes the colour is powerful and symbolizes what I am feeling in my heart. Sometimes I’m simply into the colour and want more of it represented in my life. The process keeps me somewhat accountable to small and big picture style and life goals. If nothing else, it’s a great way to reflect and reset for the new year.

Here are my choices from previous years:

  • 2019: Relaxed / red
  • 2020: Experience / blue
  • 2021: Achieve / citron

Today I’m choosing my word and colour for 2022, and hope you’ll join me. It’s all in good fun.

Word: ACHIEVE

I’ve selected the same word as 2021, because unforeseen circumstances kept me from completing a work deliverable that I had started with gusto at the beginning of the year. I want to pick up from where I left off and go for it. 2022 is a do-over of sorts, and I am quite energized about it.

I’m adding a second word because a new year should start with a new word. The second word is FUN because after enormous stress and loss, fun has been in short supply. Pandemic-permitting, that will change as hubs Greg and I exert a good amount of energy into creating memorable fun moments with friends, and loved ones. We intend to seize opportunities, live in the present, be more serendipitous, and make every day meaningful.

Colour: LIGHT BLUE

I am more into the aesthetic of light blue than any symbolism it might suggest. I’d like to add more of it to my wardrobe, and create outfit complements with my new light blue specs. Specifically, I’m looking to add another pair of light blue shoes, another bag to replace one that bit the dust, a coat, and anything else that that tickles my fancy. I am including saturated pastels, light turquoise, and mid-tone blues in the light blue category. It’s a colour that runs through our home, and will play an important role in the remodel we’re planning this year.

Over to you. If you like, join us in choosing a word and colour for the year. Don’t overthink it. Your first and freshest thoughts on the subject are likely to be the best ones. Share them in the comments section when you have a moment. I’m looking forward to hearing them.

Roundups

Simpler Items

This week's list of top picks list is about basic pieces.

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Assorted Items

Items for Summer, both in and out of air conditioning.

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Casual Summer Vibes

This week's top picks are good for a casual Summer vibe.

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Summery Earth Tones

These items are for those who like to wear casual earth tones in warm and hot weather.

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Hints of Spring

Some tried-and-tested winning items to refresh your style for Spring.

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Dressier Items

An assortment of dressier top picks might be just what the doctor ordered.

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Winter Jacket Cosiness

A new outfit from Alexandra Fleurisson of Mademoiselle Modeuse, whom we introduced to YLF in February 2020.

The cosy black and white aviator jacket with matching booties make this outfit for me. The white shearling lightens up the look and adds fluffy textural interest. Alexandra has tucked a lightweight turtleneck into relaxed straight cropped jeans. This lengthens the leg line from the waist up, while the top’s vertical ribbing creates further vertical integrity. Belting the jeans, and opting for a fitted top creates structure and balances out the boxy cut of the trendy aviator jacket. The bright orange adds spicy colour, which is repeated in the fiery red lip and our blogger’s red hair. Playful olive with gold earrings and a classic Louis Vuitton crossbody complete this casual cosy Winter outfit.

Mademoiselle Modeuse - 1

Mademoiselle Modeuse - 2

Assorted Fab Finds

There’s a lot on sale at the moment, so if you like a bargain then have some fun browsing end-of-season sales. At the same time, stay mindful and focussed on your shopping needs. Remember to listen to both your head and heart when adding items to your wardrobe. 

I’m shopping more out of season than I used to. Personally, I don’t mind if a new item goes unworn for many months, because when an item is fab-for-me, and especially if it’s a signature item, it’s going to get worn when the weather and occasion are right. Onto some fab stuff.

1. Weatherproof Boots

Here’s an assortment of weatherproof boots with great online reviews. Notably, more brands are including weatherproof options in their assortments, which makes me think that the demand has momentum. Most styles come in many colours so click the links to see the range. It’s fab to match weatherproof footwear to wool coats, jackets, puffers, and accessory complements. That way your Winter look is easier to pull together. Don’t let the nubuck and suede versions put you off, because they do have weatherproof coatings. I’m a big Sperry duck boot fan and have an old cream pair that was ideal for our snowy and icy frozen Seattle Christmas and New Year. I wore them daily with cream beanies or bags to match.

Zappos
Naturalizer Dara
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Top Pick
6
Zappos
Naturalizer Dara
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5
Zappos
Kodiak Soren
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2
Zappos
Vionic Nolan
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4

2. Madewell Pull-On Pants

These cosy bottoms work well on a range of body types, and are especially great on curvier figures. They are pull-on silhouettes with back elastic, but have front button and zipper closures too. Some of the rises are high and others are mid-length. Stocks are low, but on the off chance that you see a pair in stores, try it on if the colour is right. They might surprise you in a good way.

3. Hobbs Sale Items

I like Hobbs, a British brand that does good quality, trendy classics in an assortment of colours and luxurious fabrics. The brand offers petites and is producing more sustainably and ethically too. Items are more affordable when you catch them on sale. Hobbs toppers, knitwear and dresses are particularly good. I’ve ordered the Safia Midi Dress because it can work well in Summer, and the lemons remind me of our amazing trip to Positano.

4. WhIte House Black Market Toppers

Some of my clients find excellent items at WHBM season after season. They offer petites and sizes range from XXS to XXL, or US00 to US20. The collections are worth a look. Their toppers are quite interesting, and their pants can work on a curvier bottom half. Rises aren’t that high either.