Brand Spotlight: Aritzia

Aritzia is a Canadian retailer that has become enormously popular in the US. There are two huge stores in Seattle that buzz with activity in the afternoons when Generation Z descends, often resulting in queues for the dressing rooms. The brand describes itself as “Everyday Luxury”, which feels accurate to my eye. The assortment is trend-driven, modern, urban, polished, and minimalist. The palette leans heavily neutral and solid. Patterns and bright colours are rare, and the overall aesthetic is clean and understated. In terms of quality and fabrication, Aritzia generally sits above retailers like Zara and H&M, and the higher price points reflect that.

When I first shopped at Aritzia, I found the assortment puzzling. Career wear, athleisure, and clubbing attire all under one roof and seemingly aimed at the same customer felt disjointed. Over time, I realized that this is one of the retailer’s strengths. Aritzia operates almost like several boutiques housed within one store, with each in-house label catering to a different aesthetic and lifestyle. For example, the “Babaton” label focuses on polished tailoring and modern workwear. “Wilfred” feels softer, more romantic, and fashion-forward. “Sunday Best” skews youthful and playful. “TNA” is casual, sporty, and athleisure-inspired. Housing these different style identities together broadens the appeal of the retailer, and cleverly allows customers to shop across multiple lifestyles in one place.

The size range has improved over the years. Many items run from XXS to 2XL, although availability varies by style and silhouette. Fit can also be inconsistent across the different labels. Some silhouettes are oversized and roomy, while others are quite trim and body-con. Some bottoms are offered in curvy fits too. It helps to try items on, and to read online reviews and garment measurements carefully before ordering.

Price points range from moderate to fairly high. Tees and simple tops often start around US$40 to US$80. Knitwear and dresses tend to sit in the US$100 to US$250 range, while tailoring and outerwear can climb significantly higher. Their famous Super Puff jackets can cost several hundred dollars depending on fabrication and length. Aritzia does host seasonal sales, which makes the assortment more affordable.

Fabrics and quality are generally great, although not uniformly exceptional across every category. Some pieces are beautifully made and wear extremely well, while others are less impressive. To my eye, Aritzia excels at elevated wardrobe essentials and simple modern tailoring. Think dressy wool coats, trench coats, trousers, blazers, solid blouses, belts, and puffer jackets. Those are exactly the categories I tend to shop with clients, often with great success.

Many Aritzia stores are architecturally striking, with soaring ceilings and carefully designed interiors that feel upscale. Some locations include cafe or lounge-like elements. There are usually patient friends and family members waiting comfortably in the lounge while their loved ones shop. The dressing room set-up is distinctive too. The fitting rooms themselves are fairly minimal, while the communal mirror area outside the rooms is expansive and dramatic, with floor-to-ceiling mirrors. That means you need to step outside the fitting room to see said items in the mirror, which some shoppers find fun and others find off-putting.

Overall, Aritzia occupies an interesting niche in the market, and I enjoy browsing in-person with clients when I’m at the mall. It offers trend-aware fashion with a polished and elevated sensibility, while remaining practical, clean, neutral, and subtle. For shoppers who enjoy modern fashion with a luxe feel and minimalist palette, it’s a retailer worth browsing. Personally, I’ve had excellent luck with Aritzia’s dressy Effortless Pants, especially versions made with fabrics from Portugal and Japan. On the other hand, I’ve passed on a few 100% polyester items that didn’t end up working when put through their paces.

Over to you. Have you shopped at Aritzia, and what are your impressions of the brand and assortment?

Aritzia The Effortless Pant

Aritzia Cozy Sweatfleece Mega Raglan Zip Hoodie

Outfit Formula: Outfits with Neckties

Adding a menswear necktie to an outfit is an acquired taste. Personally, I bat for Team Menswear Necktie. Having worn neckties for years as part of a school uniform, I am no stranger to neckties. Like button down shirts, they are an honest and nostalgic part of my style. 

I’d like to rekindle the vibe with a pretty new necktie in soft colours. Something along these lines:

Some of my clients enjoy wearing neckties, and it’s fun to be creative with their outfits. Here’s some outfit inspiration for those who enjoy the look too. For those who don’t, perhaps you’ll appreciate the vibe from afar.

1. Necktie Bow

I’m fascinated by how they tied this necktie. Visually, it’s very effective! I think it’s a loosely tied bow, and will be experimenting at home. A high contrast necktie is worn on the skin of the neck, so inside the collar of the shirt and not around it. Choose any colour button down shirt and tie. You could wear the necktie bow over a T-shirt too. This shirt is semi tucked, and the pairing is worn with a floral mini skirt, which you can substitute with a skirt that is more to your taste. Add shoes and a bag that work with the outfit.

Necktie Bow

2. Utility Pants, Short Jacket, Heels

A pair of olive utility pants is paired with a tucked blue and white striped button down shirt. A high contrast navy necktie is worn around the shirt collar the traditional way. A short off white Chanel-esque tweed jacket is the dressy topper of choice. It matches dressy white pumps that amp up “the pretty” in the outfit. The black belt adds back traditional “menswear dressing”. Add a bag to match the palette.

Utility Pants, Short Jacket, Heels

3. Suited

These outfits are from Aritzia. The outfit on the left combines a dressy and somewhat slouchy grey pants suit with an untucked white T-shirt. A high contrast blue and navy striped necktie is draped loosely around the neck like an oblong scarf. Chunky athletic grey, black and white sneakers are the sporty shoe of choice. I’d have preferred to see low profile refined sneakers with the suit, although wear the shoes that work best for you. The outfit on the right combines a pair of black dressy and slouchy trousers with a brown and white striped button down shirt. A chocolate brown patterned necktie is worn in a traditional way around the collar of the shirt. A fluid dressy blazer tops the pairing. Dressy black boots and belt match the black bottoms and model’s hair.

4. Relaxed with Dressy Shoes

An oversized pale pink button down shirt with rolled up sleeves is tucked into a pair of dark grey pleated trousers. A low contrast light grey striped tie is worn in a loose and relaxed way around the collar of the shirt. White pointy toe pumps add a dressy, pretty and refined edge to the look. White earrings add a playful element. Add a bag that works with the outfit.

Relaxed with Dressy Shoes

5. Jorts and Culottes

Last, a light blue and white striped button down shirt is combined with a matching necktie creating a delightful set and low contrast effect. Sleeves are scrunched to showcase forearm skin, and relax the shirt. The shirt is tucked into lemon jorts (culottes). Black slingbacks and clutch add a dressy edge, and match the model’s hair. Add jewellery, watch and eyewear as desired.

Jorts and Culottes

Trend: Smocked Tops, Skirts, Dresses

Smocking involves rows of gathered fabric held together with elasticated stitching, creating stretch, texture, and structure. Some retailers refer to smocking as shirring. We see this familiar design feature every season, although it’s particularly popular at the moment. There is smocking on tops, skirts, and dresses across all sorts of colours, patterns, and fabrics. 

The detailing can vary enormously. Sometimes the smocking is subtle and tonal, adding quiet texture and a gently fitted effect. Other times it is dramatic and highly visible, becoming the focal point of the garment. Smocking can appear on bodices, waistlines, cuffs, necklines, shoulder straps, and even across entire garments. Some pieces use only a small panel of smocking for comfort and fit, while others are fully smocked and very stretchy. The collection shows many smocked examples.

Zara
Smocked Striped Top
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Zara
Smocked Plaid Shirt
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Zara
Smocked Gingham Top
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Zara
Striped Smocked Top
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Zara
Plaid Smocked Shirt
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Zara
Smocked Gingham Top
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Shopbop
RAILS Alessa Skirt
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Shopbop
RAILS Alton Top
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Shopbop
RAILS Alessi Dress
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One of the practical strengths of smocking is that it can taper a garment and create shape without feeling stiff or restrictive. Smocked bodices and waists can provide contouring while remaining comfortable and flexible to wear. Smocked cuffs on wide sleeves add a romantic touch. Smocking on knitted jersey fabrics can feel especially comfortable and easy to wear.

On the other hand, heavy smocking can feel bulky, clingy, or overly textured. Fully smocked garments can feel snug in very hot weather despite the lightweight fabric. Sometimes the elasticated stitching loses its recovery over time, which can be difficult to repair.

There is a lot of versatility within the trend. Depending on the styling and design details, smocked garments can lean bohemian, cottagecore, retro, beachy, classic, modern, or architectural. Smocked dresses are especially popular for warm and hot weather, while smocked tops and skirts with more coverage transition well into colder seasons when layered with jackets, knitwear, and boots.

I like the pretty and retro effect of smocking. I’ve worn smocked dresses, tops, and skirts in the past, especially when I lived in a Mediterranean climate close to a sunny beach. These days I wear smocked items less frequently, although I still have a few in my wardrobe.

How about you? What do you think of smocked tops, skirts, and dresses?

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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Trend: Balloon Pants

Balloon pants are having a fashion moment. They’re not the same as barrel, lantern or horseshoe pants or jeans, although related to the silhouette. Balloon pants are softer, drapier, and more voluminous than barrels. Think of them as genie pants or harem pants in any colour or pattern. They are dramatic, breezy, easy to fit, and very summery, bringing volume and movement to an outfit in a way that feels relaxed and comfortable. 

The silhouette is fitted on the waist, pouffy, very wide, and flowing through the hips and legs, and narrowing at the ankle with cuffs or elasticated hems. Waistbands and ankle hems are frequently gathered, thereby creating theatrical volume. Lengths vary from cropped to full length. They are tricky to hem shorter so keep that in mind.

The collection shows examples of balloon pants.

Mango
Mid-rise Baggy Pants
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Mango
Mid-rise Baggy Pants
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Mango
Mid-rise Baggy Pants
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Mango
Mid-rise Baggy Pants
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Zara
Elastic Waist Pants
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Zara
Bow Balloon Pants
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Zara
Elastic Waist Pants
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Zara
Nylon Balloon Pants
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Zara
Nylon Balloon Pants
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Part of the item’s appeal is the fabric assortment. Balloon pants come in crisp cottons, linens, gauzy sheers, silk, satins, soft knitted jerseys, crepes, chiffons, and fluid blends that drape like a dream. Some versions are quite sheer, pleated, and float as you move. Some versions make a great bathing suit cover-up to wear at the beach and pool.

The vibe can range from beachy, carefree and bohemian, to arty, distinctive, and elegant depending on the styling and fabric. Casual versions look great with flat sandals, tees, tanks, asymmetrical tops, gauzy sweaters, camisole tops, cropped shirts, and banded tops, making them practical for super hot climates because they offer airflow and leg coverage from the sun. Dressier silky versions paired with heels and refined tops can look dramatic, pretty and glamorous for evenings out.

Balloon Pants

I like the look of balloon pants. They are awesome for hot climates in the right fabrics. If you have long hot Summers, the silhouette is worth a try. Might be just the variation your Summer wardrobe refresh needs if skirts, dresses and shorts are not your thing. Like many of today’s silhouettes, they reflect fashion’s shift toward ease, movement, and comfort. Milk it! They also take me back to the late ’70s and early ’80s, which are fun fashion memories. Perfectly beachy worn in a casual way, and with an effective boho vibe. Playfully glam styled in a dressy way.

What do you think of the balloon pants trend?

Fab Finds: Easy Tops

Here’s a collection of tops that are generally easy to wear, style and launder. Many are winners on clients, and many have good reviews. There are lots of natural fibres, and some petite sizes too. Tops are less basic than a simple solid tee. There are fantastic neckline and sleeve details. Some have parties at the back. Some items are on sale. The shorter tops work particularly well with skirts. 

Notably, the Sanctuary Perfect T-Shirt looks best in the darker and richer colours. Tommy Hilfiger does surprisingly great cotton tops. My favourite cotton button down shirts are from Ralph Lauren, and I have all the blues and blue stripes. Very crisp and polished. They run narrow so size up. Boden’s fits, bright colours, and quality are fantastic. Madewell is doing boho-lite particularly well. Lots of pretty details from Nic & Zoe. Some tops have matching bottoms to create sets, so browse the options if that appeals to you.

Macy's
Petite Tie-Neck Top
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Shopbop
AGOLDE Ellery Tee
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Nordstrom
H&M Cape Blouse
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Uniqlo’s Shirring Boat Neck Sleeveless T-Shirt from Uniqlo has been a hit with clients to wear as a layering top, or on its own. You can wear it fluidly like the models, or size down for a fitted look. The fabric is comfortable, forgiving, and practical. It works on petite and tall clients, and looks good with Summery pants and skirts.

Uniqlo Shirring Boat Neck Sleeveless T-Shirt