Ironing for Sustainability

Ironing, steaming and pressing clothing is generally not our favourite way to spend our time. Most of my friends, family and clients abhor these chores. But it all depends on whether you’re at peace with the crease. If you enjoy a very polished style and pristine looking wardrobe items, chances are high that you’ll go the extra mile and iron them. If your style is a little or a lot more RATE (rough around the edges), you’ll probably be more relaxed about having a few creases.

I don’t enjoy ironing that much, but my tolerance for creases is very low. With the exception of a casual linen shirt on a hot Summer’s day, I feel untidy and unpolished in clothing that’s creased. So I bite the bullet and iron creased clothing to make it look neat, fresh and “new.”

I send some clothing for dry cleaning and launder the rest myself. Excluding underwear, socks, and workout wear, I do not launder clothing after one wear unless it’s stained or has an odour. This is how I grew up, and the habit stuck. It’s a waste of energy, time and resources to wash an item that really doesn’t need a wash, and excess laundering is hard on clothing. I air out some items, and fold or hang the rest neatly back in their spot in my wardrobe. I iron the items before wearing them again, so that they look and feel pristine.

In a very real way, ironing helps me to launder less frequently. I guess I am using extra energy for the ironing itself, but I think that overall it’s more sustainable than laundering items after every wear. And definitely less expensive, both financially and environmentally, than sending items to the cleaners. So think of it as ironing to save the environment, and maybe it will feel less like a chore.

Weekly Roundup: Best Hand Creams

There is an extreme amount of hand washing going on in the world at the moment. It’s a very important precautionary measure against the spread of germs, but it can leave the skin on our hands dry, irritated, and even cracked. Perhaps most importantly, cracked skin can leave our hands vulnerable to infection.

My own hands feel like sandpaper, and the skin is sore if I don’t moisturize and hydrate them regularly after hand washing. So I’ve compiled a collection of our forum’s favourite hand creams and lotions. The roundup also includes favourites from my clients and friends. The assortment ranges greatly in formula, price point and scent. Some creams are scented, and others are scent-free. Some creams are free of parabens and relieve eczema. Some formulas are greasy and thick, and others are smooth and silky. Some formulas might not feel or smell as good when you use them, but are very effective. Some are pricey, and others as cheap as chips.

There are many hand creams here that I like. I’ve recently ordered a few new-to-me creams to try from this tried-and-tested assortment. Personally, I like a hand cream with a scent and don’t mind the greasy aspect at all. I like it to be thick, rich, creamy, and a bit greasy. I like it to LAST for a while. I find that non-greasy and thin hand creams don’t last on my skin type. They absorb too quickly and my hands feel dry again soon. My favourite hand creams are from “Library of Flowers” because they tick all of my boxes.

But the very best hand cream is the butter used in baking when you knead dough. My word, do my hands look and feel good after making a pie crust or crumble topping. Beautifully moisturized, supple, and exercised.

Over to you. What’s your favourite hand cream and why? Let’s add to this curated collection with your recommendations.

Wardrobe Chores to Pass the Extra Time at Home

Maintaining social distance is extremely important if we are to minimize the spread of the novel coronavirus. So many of us are spending most of our time at home right now, with our communities in various levels of lockdown. The isolation can be annoying and stressful, but here are some wardrobe and style-related tasks that might be a practical use of the extra time indoors. 

Of course, there are much more important things to think about than your wardrobe, but these chores might temporarily take your mind off the serious situation we find ourselves in. I find them therapeutic to do and feel a sense of satisfaction when they are complete.

1. Spruce Up Footwear and Handbags

Polish leather, clean synthetics, scrub sneakers, launder insoles and canvas, and make white laces look sparkling white by soaking them in Oxi-Clean. Wipe bags down with a damp cloth or dust them with a duster. Carefully and very gently remove blue denim stains with nail polish remover.

The first wardrobe chore on my list is to scrub my multiple pairs of sneakers, make those white soles shine, and wash the laces so that they are once again pearly white.

2. Catch up on Clothing Alterations and Repairs

Now is a good time to hem pants, jeans, skirts and dresses, fix and taper seams, and alter waistbands if you’re handy with the sewing machine. Sew buttons back onto wardrobe items. Alter the position of buttons on tops, sleeves and jackets to create a better fit. Finish a sewing project you started, and wear the item.

3. Catch up on Ironing and Steaming

Pop on the tele and attack the pile of ironing. Pop on a podcast and steam those closet darlings begging for a press. Attend to the backlog of laundry, remove stubborn stains, and make sure that items are clean before putting them away for the seasonal switcheroo.

4. Edit and Review your Wardrobe

This is a potentially HUGE job, but one that can be broken down into smaller tasks if you tackle one wardrobe category at a time. Follow my guidelines in the following posts:

If you edit and review your wardrobe regularly, the process will be quick. Feel free to ask questions on the YLF forum along the way.

5. Improve Storage Spaces

Now is a great time to tidy closets and drawers, and improve the way we store our wardrobe items. Try hanging, packing, and folding items in a more practical and neat way if there is room for improvement. Rearrange the way you organize wardrobe items to best suit your needs. Do the seasonal switch if that’s how you roll.

6. Bring on Outfit Creation Sessions

Put on some music and have a creative outfit making session. Pull out orphaned items and try to incorporate them into complete outfits that make you feel fab. Try on outfits you’ve had mulling around in your head. Pull together multiple looks with a 30-item capsule. Create outfits for the upcoming season. Create outfits that remix new items with old items. Create outfits using new-to-you colour combinations. Create outfits with an unexpected component. Have fun being creative, embrace its mess, and document fabulous looks along the way.

7. Clean Out the Make-Up, Toiletry and Jewellery Drawers

Now is as good a time as any to spring-clean pesky drawers of small items we seldom get around to cleaning out. Yes it’s tedious, but awfully satisfying when it’s done. Throw out what is old, used up, and expired. Untangle, clean, and reorganize your jewellery boxes and storage spaces.

8. Document Your Wardrobe In YLF Finds

I LOVE that my wardrobe is digitally represented using YLF Finds, because it allows me to see my wardrobe across any category — and as a whole — at the press of a button. It makes it very easy to pack travel capsules, and view my wardrobe in terms of all sorts of combinations. I can identify wardrobe holes, spot the areas that need a trendy refresh, and keep a strict control on inventory. It also minimizes closet orphans, and eliminates unnecessary duplication. I know exactly what I have at any time, and you can view exactly what I currently have in my wardrobe too.

It takes a while to set this up. First you need to collect your wardrobe items in Finds. For many popular stores you can use the collector to easily add them from your browser. For any other stores, you can create Custom Finds with existing photographs of the items, or photograph the items yourself. This does take time, but if you’re anything like me you’ll be grateful when it’s done.

Maintaining your digital wardrobe is as important. You have to remove what you pass on and add new purchases so that things stay accurate and up-to-date. But that’s easy once all the initial legwork is done. I highly recommend that you get cracking creating a digital and visual representation of your wardrobe.

9. De-Pill Knitwear

It’s not fun, but quite addictive and extremely satisfying. You’ll need the right tools, good light, patience, and a gentle hand. It’s a great idea to de-pill knitwear and woolly coats before you store them away for upcoming hot weather. Things will look new when you see them again in September.

10. Give Yourself a Manicure, Pedicure and Facial

After all the chores, give yourself a break with a moisturizing self-manicure and pedicure. Soak those feet and call it a day. Add a facial scrub and pop on a face mask. Double up on the hand cream because my goodness, our hands are dry and raw from excessive washing.

Some of our forum members got stuck into doing these wardrobe and style chores already. Feel free to join the YLF community on the forum by sharing your own progress. I’ll show you my sparkling sneakers later this week.

Finally, we wish everyone a safe week, especially those of us who have pre-existing conditions that make them more vulnerable to the COVID-19 virus.

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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Outfit Formula: Subtle Safari Chic

The Safari Chic trend takes me back to the early and mid ‘90s. Lots of beige, tan, stone, olive, toffee, khaki, brown, white, mustard and a bit of black. Think casual jackets, shirts, dresses, skirts, pants, jumpsuits blouses, tees and shorts in these typical earthy shades with utility detailing like drawstrings, tie belts, cargo pockets, carpenter loops, canvas belts, patch pockets, and tortoiseshell trim. Finish off the look with brown leather, animal print, and earthy accents. The collection below showcases some good Safari Chic looks.

Shopbop
A.L.C. Emma Dress
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Top Pick
5
Mango
Cotton Bucket Bag
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Top Pick
3
Mango
Tiger Print Dress
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Top Pick
3
Mango
Cotton Baggy Pants
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Top Pick
2

Here are some Safari Chic outfits that are subtle and simple instead of layered and maximal. The colour palette and utility integrity is key.

1. Trendy Paperbag Waist and Big Shirt

Combine a pair of trendy tan, khaki, olive or toffee utility paperbag waist pants with a big white tucked shirt. Finish off the look with brown footwear and a bag in the same subtle palette. Here, white shoes would work too. Or substitute the white for a shade of olive or brown. Animal print footwear could be smashing.

VANESSA BRUNO Epagny Belted Frayed Cotton-blend Canvas Tapered Pants

2. Utility Jacket with Column of White

The column of white under the tan safari jacket makes it look crisp and unique. The column combines a white tee and pair of wide crop jeans, but you can choose any silhouette of top and jeans, pants or shorts. The snakeskin shoes add a fun touch and look interesting. I can see the look with brown boots, brown sandals, mules or white sneakers too.

Boyish The Jeffery Safari Jacket

3. Black on Black Utility Dress

A utility dress combined with a pair of flat sandals is a great way to create a simple Safari Chic look. Here the black is unexpected and looks lovely on the black-haired model. I’d have preferred brown, gold, olive, animal print or white sandals, but if you like wearing black from head to toe – go for it. Or choose a utility dress in another safari colour.

DL1961 Fire Island Utility Dress

4. Boiler Suit and Animal Print

And last is a nod to the ‘80s boiler suit, which in the right earthy colours can look fably Safari Chic because of its utility integrity. Nice addition of the snakeskin boots, although earthy leather boots, mules, sandal booties, or gladiators would work well too. Add jewellery, eyewear, scarves, headgear, and watch as desired.

Banana Republic TENCEL Flight Jumpsuit

Link Love: Celebrating Women in March

March 8th was International Women’s Day and March is Women’s History Month. To celebrate Refinery29 rounded up 15 women-led fashion brands, because, in their own words: “We can take ownership of our roles as consumers by helping more businesswomen succeed, and by supporting companies with ethical production practices from start to finish.”

They also listed 10 women-run fashion houses changing how we dress.

Refinery29 also reports that “the Hollywood hair industry has long been dominated by white men. There’s still a huge gender discrepancy in editorial hairstyling, with women making up only around 26% of the hair talent at major agencies for jobs like magazine covers and ad campaigns. But more female artists are finally getting their long overdue recognition. Here’s 13 new female hairdressers who are rising to the top of the field.”

Last but not least, they’re featuring 9 female make-up artists you should be following in 2020.

Fab Links from Our Members

Annagybe wanted to share “Do Luxury Houses Need Fashion Designers.” She adds: “To me it seems the era of the auteur is over, and money seems to be major driver. But also the world has changed since Yves Saint Laurent.”

A few weeks ago, a number of forum members started a kind of shopping fast, and others were wondering whether to follow their example or not. So The Cat thought this post will likely be of interest.

kkards loved this article about Betty Catroux: “Every once in a while I read something and think, how could I not know about this person. I’m not sure why I’ve never heard of her before, but WOW, I’m totally taken with her style.”

Nemosmom came across this interview with Christian Siriano. The highlight for her was his view of Do Your Own Thing regardless of gender.

This post talks about how you might have to betray your true nature to actually feel authentic. Vildy found it an interesting read in light of the Do Your Own Thing trend, and that it’s not always so easy as it may seem.