Link Love: The Tall Boot Trend

One of the F/W 2017 trends I’m super excited about is the return of knee-high boots. I’ve been browsing Angie’s pinboard, and thought these were particularly fun:

Finding great-fitting tall boots when you have larger calves can be tricky. The Huffington Post has some suggestions.

If you’d like to give over-the-knee boots a try, then PopSugar’s round-up is worth a look.

Fab Links from Our Members

Nordstrom is opening a new concept store in West California that won’t stock clothes: “Nordstrom Local will focus on free consultations with personal stylists, who will advise customers and then have the merchandise brought in. People can also get manicures and curbside pickup.” Aquamarine thinks the concept is interesting, but can’t quite believe this will ever really take off.

LadyNIB found this article about how Forever21 and other retailers avoid liability for factories that underpay workers to sew their clothes thought-provoking.

Leslie Jones cheering in the front row at Christian Siriano’s show during New York Fashion Week made Shevia smile.

Angie reports that facekinis are trending in China as a way to protect your face from the sun. She adds: “I think I’ll stick to a hat.”

Joha found it interesting to read this different perspective on the widely circulated New York Times article from last year on office dress codes.

Wide Legs with Flats for Fall

I saw lots of wide leg trousers styled with flats coming down the runway this year, and Scandinavian COS has wasted no time incorporating the combination into its assortment. The examples below are a good representation of the vibe. 

Notice the FULL length of the trousers and jeans. Most are floor scraping or longer. Flat oxfords, loafers, booties and sneakers with one inch heels are the choice for footwear. Leg widths are wider than bootcuts because there is volume all the way down the leg. Rises are mid or high and fits are tailored on the hips and waist. Some versions have pleats.

Tops run the gamut. Some are tailored and tucked. Some are fluid and tucked. Some are fluid and untucked, while others are long, oversized and untucked. You can create a high or low contrast with the top. A low contrast or tonal combination creates vertical integrity. 

I’ve had some clients embrace the combination already. Generally, clients with long legs and narrow hips enjoy this look. They keep their tops fluid and untucked to prevent looking short in the waist, and have especially enjoyed the vibe with fashion sneakers, (much like the second example above.) 

I’ve also had long-waisted clients wear the look with panache. Tailored tucked tops lengthen the leg line from the hips upward, and shorten the torso, creating flattering proportions. (Much like the first, fourth and eighth examples above.) Keeping the top and bottom tonal further streamlines the combination.

You have to be okay with the volume on the leg and around the feet. To my eye the long length is essential because it adds a luxurious integrity to the vibe and makes your legs look longer. You don’t need to sweep the floor with your trousers, but a length that almost scrapes the surface of the ground is dead right. 

The part I find most appealing is the closed toe flats. Although full-length wide legs and bootcuts look stellar and elegant with heeled booties, oxfords and pumps at this floor-grazing length, the flats are a more comfortable option for people like me. The last time I tried full-length wide legs with flats, I felt dumpy, clumsy and unpolished. But those were slouchy trousers with an untucked top. I need to try a more tailored and streamlined version with a tucked top, or semi-tucked top to see if I feel differently. A style in crease-resistant fabric would be fab. I also like the fifth example above, which combines a roomy welted tunic with the trousers. A little 1920s, and just enough structure because the welt of the top tempers its volume.  

Of course, no matter how you slice and dice it, you can’t wear floor-grazing wide legs in foul weather. It has to be dry, which is dicey in the Autumn and Winter in Seattle. Nevertheless, I’m sufficiently intrigued by the combination to try it because it’s DIFFERENT. I’m curious. How about you?

Weekly Roundup: COS Items

I went shopping with Inge in Arnhem in the Netherlands a couple of weeks ago, and we spent some time in Scandinavian retailer COS. We browsed, fitted, and bought fab pieces to refresh for Autumn and Winter. 

COS pieces are architectural, voluminous, unstructured, and an acquired taste. When you combine COS pieces together, you can create an avant-garde vibe that’s arty and unique. Their silhouettes are for the most part beyond body type. This means that if you’re prepared to create outfit proportions that are not traditionally flattering, you can have fun with their silhouettes with any body type up to a size US12/14 (unfortunately their size curve stops there.) Silhouettes are generally fluid or oversized. They may have tailored aspects, but volume is COS’s thing. The items drape extremely well, and some of the silhouettes are genius. 

Most of the time I’m sized out of their smallest size, but every so often I score when there’s just enough structure in the garment. If the pieces fit my narrow shoulders and arms, I can usually make the rest of the volume work. 

I’ve seen COS pieces work on petites, so you do not need to be tall to wear the look. You simply have to add structure to the outfit your way, adhere to your personal figure flattering priorities, and enjoy wearing volume in the right places on your body. 

The items below caught my eye, and in most cases we tried them on. I came back with the A-Line Jumper and Shirt Dress with Irregular Hem, both in olive. There are colour options in each item so be sure to browse the links.

  • COS A-line jumper: Gorgeous two-toned texture and boat neck. Hides bra straps unless your shoulders slope. Substantial fabric and good drape. The lower half of the pullover falls away from the body creating a futuristic - yet Modern Retro - effect that is not shown on the model. Fluid Structure. Shorter in person. Pristine, clean and polished. It had to follow me home. Available in black.
  • COS Shirt dress with irregular hem: Dress that is longer on me than on the model. Hits the top of my kneecap and I'm 5ft 6. It's long at the back and sides, which gives it more "length". Very architectural and voluminous from the side, so you have to be at peace with that. It only JUST does not swallow me up. The shirt detailing and ribbon placket down the front add lots of vertical integrity and structure. Fun side entry pockets. Pristine and crisp. Gorgeous heavy fabric. Impeccable drape. Modern, yet Retro too. Will wear it with tall boots and over skinnies. Have already worn it with cream booties. Maybe with hosiery and oxfords too. Well made. Chic.
  • COS Wool car coat: Structured Cocoon Fabness. And no, you won't look like a giant Easter egg wearing it. Looks better in person. Rounder and more interesting. Well made. MODERN. Crease-resistant fabric that holds its shape. Sharp and quite dressy. Pink is warm - not cool. I almost came home with it, but have my heart set on a turquoise coat.
  • COS Gathered-neck wool dress: A lightweight Fall dress that's fab for mild weather. Great on a shorter neck and larger bust. Fun over skinnies and cropped straights.
  • COS Textured knit cardigan: Inge bought this and it looks fabulous. Richly textured and great drape. Very comfy and weighty. It's A-line - and in this case I think her height helped temper the volume. Comes in black and navy.
  • COS Textured jacquard top: AMAZING sour moss green textured knit top that works best if you can fill it out. Comfy, yet polished. I was sized out of the style but loved it.
  • COS Knitted jumper with shirt detail: Very roomy layers that look fab on blondes and strawberry blondes. Futuristic Folksy. I like the effect with tonal tan bottoms and light bottoms. Available in blue and nice with denim.
  • COS Knitted top with pleated sleeves: This fit a narrow frame quite well. Quite structured, crisp and neat. Comes in black, tan and olive. It would have followed me home, but it's too lightweight for me. Streamlined over fitted pants.
  • COS Drape collar A-line dress: MOD Fabness. Fun side entry pockets and great cut-out detail. Unique. It's very A-line, and best on someone who can fill it out.
  • COS Cotton-jacquard dress: A more structured COS piece in a two-toned knit with gathers on the crown of the sleeves. '80s Sweater Dress Fabness. Fun over sleek pants, or with hosiery and tall boots.
  • COS Knitted top with pleats: A good top for a small-busted pear-shaped body type. Good on a broad-shouldered apple shape too. Hangs beautifully, and is fab over a pencil skirt. Comes in black.
  • COS Tailored pleat trousers: Tomboy Fabness that might run a little small. Can work on straighter and curvier body types depending on how much you want the style to slouch. I love these tailored pleated pants and want them in navy. I'll make them look pretty to temper their masculinity but with flat footwear. Quite the challenge.
  • COS Oversized drop-crotch trousers: Harem Pants Fabness. Great with a boxy tonal top that's left untucked.
  • COS Twisted-seam trousers: Tomboy twisted pants that look really good with a fitted top to temper their masculinity. Works on a range of body types depending on how slouchy you wear them. They are though, more tailored than you think. Roomy on the thighs.
  • COS Speckled straight-leg jeans: These have a very tailored fit up top, and then hang with volume on the leg in a super straight way. Fashion-forward. Early '80s Fabness. Woven. No stretch. DIFFERENT. You can wear them with a tight or roomy top. Semi-tuck, or wear the top untucked. I loved the fabric, which worked well with my hair. I'm still thinking about them, and might give them another go.
  • COS Oversized milano knit jumper: Cozy Roomy Tan Fabness. The welt adds a nice bit of structure, as does the fitted neckline. You have to have a long neck to wear this style. A warm beige. I might give it a go.
  • COS Wool polo scarf: Super cute two-toned SHORT poncho for petites. Comes in grey.
  • COS Draped contrast-panelled skirt: I haven't seen the skirt in person, but the drape and shape look fab. The magical diagonal line across the front creates a slimming effect.

Visit the collection page to see the items alongside my descriptions.

Roundups

Simpler Items

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

Read More

Assorted Items

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

Read More

Casual Summer Vibes

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

Read More

Summery Earth Tones

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

Read More

Hints of Spring

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

Read More

Dressier Items

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

Read More

Burgundy Pants for Early Fall

A new outfit from Kimberly Smith of Penny Pincher Fashion, whom we introduced to YLF in October 2013.

Pairing a graphic black and white striped sweater with trousers in a rich shade of burgundy makes for a fab early Fall outfit. The hip-bone length welted sweater lengthens the leg line on the cropped kick flare trousers. The subtle bishop sleeves add feminine flair. So do the black pointy toe flats with dainty straps. A thin, sassy choker echoes the stripes on the sweater. Kimberly’s fun round bag with on-trend tassels ties in with the black accents. Gold rings, loop earrings, and a knot bangle add warmth to the burgundy. Dark red lipstick and matching nail polish complete this polished look.

Kimberly - 2

Kimberly - 1

Save

Save

Save

Save

Save

Save

Save

Save

Save

My Wild Cards for 2017

I include wild cards in my seasonal must haves because they are an excellent way to evolve and refresh your style. They can be new-to-you colours or silhouettes of clothing, footwear and accessories. Or a new way that you wear your hair, your make-up, or put together outfits. They are often atypical of your style, but speak to you in some way. Most importantly, they are things you don’t anticipate.

2017 has been my year for wild cards. They have an earth-toned and casual theme.

Utility Pants

Utility pants used to feel too casual, slouchy and masculine for me until Greg found a dressier pair for my birthday which are tailored and sleek. He liked the utility look, and I fancied the idea of keeping them polished and pretty. I wear them with soft blouses, dainty shoes, dressy bags and drapey scarves to create a Utility Pretty vibe. I loved my birthday utility pants so much that I bought a second more casual pair with embroidery. Both pairs were perfect for our Summer road trip. 

Brown Specs 

I didn’t think I would ever wear dark specs after wearing bright, happy, acidic apple green specs for four years. They were one of the best fashion purchases of my life, and nothing could top them. Greg threw a spanner in the works and chose a dark brown pair of Modern Retro cat’s eyes with orange inner detailing as my new pair of specs. That was that. It took me a while to get used to them, but now I love them as much as my green pair.

Olive

Olive matches my green eyes, but I would often feel blah wearing it. The colour didn’t spark enough joy. So I would stick to having one olive wardrobe item in my wardrobe at a time.

My Summer utility pants were the catalyst for change. I felt like adding a new neutral to my wardrobe, and since the dirty shade of green works well with my new brown specs — why not. White pearls, which I wear most days, brighten the colour against my face. 

I’ve been building an olive capsule for Fall/Winter from scratch, and here are my items. I like that the shades of olive are different. Some tonal, some mismatched, but all working together. I plan to wear olive with navy, ink blue, denim blue, black, cream, gold, chartreuse, citron and Bordeaux. Maybe some pink, orange, turquoise and tomato red too. 

Bordeaux

I was all set to purchase a new pair of cognac booties to replace the Pradas I’ve worn out. But when I stumbled upon these Bordeaux darlings I rethought my strategy. They are an extremely dark red, which makes them look brown. They bookend my new specs and work with the olive capsule. They’re also quite maximal, whereas I usually prefer simple footwear. A completely unexpected colour with bling. Wild card for sure. I’ll be adding a bag in the same colour to create a complement, and perhaps a light-coloured scarf with a subtle Bordeaux pattern too. 

Small Crossbody Bags 

I was the “anti-crossbody” gal, finding them awfully uncomfortable and cumbersome. But the small crossbody bag in a classic shape with a bit of glitz DOES work for me. If you asked me last year whether I would build an assortment of small crossbody bags for my style in 2017, I’d have said, “no way.” Now I have three small crossbody bags — one of them is OLIVE — and I adore the casually dressy and relaxed vibe. Never say never in fashion and style.

My wild cards have led me to a new leg of my style journey, which is part of the fun and keeps things interesting. No style rut, and no dull dressing moments. True to my style, but with an earthy and more casual flavour. You do run the risk of needing to purchase a support act to go with wild cards in order to create complete outfits that look and feel pulled together. Be mindful of that as you work within your budget and add wild cards to your wardrobe.