Trend: Long Blazers

Long blazers are a flashback to the late ‘80s and ‘90s. They’ve been on the fringe of fashion for a while and are gaining momentum.The lengths of the blazers cover the bottom, and finish on the hips about a quarter or a third of the way down the thighs.  

The silhouettes vary. Some are highly structured like an equestrian jacket. Others are soft, floppy and fluid. Some are single-breasted and others double-breasted. The stance of the blazer is low, and that’s a very important design feature. Many of the long blazers in the late ‘90s had high stances, which changed up the look a lot. They’re usually collared, and come in all sorts of colours, patterns, solids, and fabrics. You can wear the blazer open or closed, and throughout the year in the right fabric for the season. The collection below shows a good assortment of the item.

Zara
Floral Printed Blazer
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Top Pick
2
Zara
Long Blazer
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Top Pick
3

I am cautious about this length of blazer because the proportions can look very off to my eye. The length of the blazer dramatically lengthens the torso thereby shortening the leg line because of the low hem on the leg. The low stance and position of the welted pockets further accentuate the length of the torso, and drag your eye downwards, which shortens the leg. This is a perfect classic British riding jacket length because when you’re on a horse, the length is swallowed up by the way you’re seated in the saddle and drapes elegantly over the thighs.

The long blazer is a slam dunk on my tall clients. They look WOW in the silhouette because they have the real estate to carry the length. The proportions that are jarring to my eye are effortlessly evened out. This is harder to do when you’re regular height or shorter. Not impossible, but you have to be careful. Keeping the long blazer open in front tempers the short-legged effect because it breaks up the horizontal line on the leg. It also creates a vertical line up the centre front of the body which draws the eye upward. Showcasing the waistline by tucking or semi-tucking a top, or wearing a cropped top when wearing the blazer open, will also lengthen the leg line because it shortens the torso. You can wear heels to give your outfit some height, keep the blazer low contrast to your bottoms to blur the low horizontal line, or wear a column of colour.

I do have some petite and regular height clients who rock the structured and unstructured long blazer vibe, some even with flats. They’re curvy hourglass and pear-shaped body types who fill out the lower half extremely well and enjoy the covering comfort of the bottom, hips and thighs. Some long blazer silhouettes have cut-away fronts that dramatically lengthen the leg line, and those are easier to feel fab in when you’re not tall. My own long Smythe equestrian blazer has cut-away fronts that make it a whole lot more flattering when I wear flats.

And last, here’s an outfit with interesting proportions. The closed long blazer draws the eye down and lengthens the torso, which shortens the leg line. Yet the much shorter length of the culottes lengthens the lower leg from the ankles upward. The two opposing silhouettes cancel each other out and create harmony. The heels further lengthen the leg line. Clever.

Veronica Beard Lou Released Hem Gaucho Jeans

Over to you. What’s your take on the long blazer trend?

Your Spring and Summer Wild Cards

A wild card is an item that is atypical for your style persona, but that speaks to you in some way. Adding a wild card to your wardrobe is an excellent way to evolve your style, making it feel extra refreshed for the season. They can be a way to solve a style and fit challenge, or to temper your poison eye for a look. Wild cards can be new colours, vibes or silhouettes. Or a new way that you wear your hair, your make-up, or put together your outfits. Wild cards always make my must haves list because nothing ventured, nothing gained.

I’ve noticed that my own wild cards happen organically and sometimes by accident. I don’t go out looking for them, but fully embrace them when they come my way. I don’t try to rationalize a wild card, but simply take it as a sign that I was meant to give this look a go. I like the spontaneity.

For Spring and Summer 2018 I added two wild cards to my style. A pair of high-rise black skinnies, and a pair of white huarache sandals:

Due to unexpectedly cold weather on a trip, I needed an emergency pair of full-length skinny jeans to wear under a dress with flats. I don’t wear opaque tights or leggings, hence the skinnies. I hadn’t planned on black or high rise, but that’s what I got. I don’t even wear black jeans, and high rise is not on my radar because of my relatively short rise. Well, I liked these jeans enough to wear them with a fluid tucked blouse and pullover on the same trip, thereby showcasing the high-rise skinny silhouette in all its glory.

I needed to replace my white sandals because I wore my old pair into the ground. Pickings were slim because I need a flat, supportive and extremely comfortable pair in a size US 6.5 narrow width. My feet are extra low volume in sandals and sometimes the narrow widths are a touch wide. I ordered several pairs and eventually chose a boho-lite pair of Naturalizer huaraches. They’re not my slam dunk sartorial preference, but an insanely good fit and sublimely comfortable. The woven leather reminds me of lace, and since I love lace I thought why the heck not. I’ve been walking around hot and dry Salt Lake City in them for days — 18,000 steps a day — and they have been incredible. I LOVE these new sandals and have already duplicated them.

I used to say that I don’t wear black jeans, and that I was as boho as Karl Lagerfeld. That’s codswallop because I do wear black jeans, and enjoy wearing boho-lite items because they’re pretty. Thanks to my wild cards, I’m keeping an open mind, solving fit challenges, and having even more fun with fashion.

Over to you. What are your Spring & Summer wild cards this year?

Modern Graphic Meets Flashdance

A new outfit from E of District of Chic, whom we introduced to YLF in November 2016.

This amazing Summer dress outfit is all about combining complementary and contrasting shapes. The asymmetrical hemline on the sleeveless Summer frock creates movement. So do the swirly strokes of the graphic black and white print. These soft swirls juxtapose nicely with the straight geometric lines of the square perforations in E’s fun bucket bag, and the eye-catching rectangular cut-outs on her white mules. The pointy toe nose of the on-trend mules and pointy frame of the retro cat eye sunnies add more sharp lines to the mix. Large resin hoop earrings and a silver bangle add curvy lines. Popping a knotted grey T-shirt over the dress gives the outfit a playful Athleisure meets ‘80s Flashdance touch. A dramatic dark red lip finishes off the look.

District of Chic - 1

District of Chic - 2

District of Chic - 3

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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Celebrating Diversity in Style

I turn 48 today and feel extremely blessed. I’m happy, healthy, loved, have dear friends, a wonderful family, the best husband, and a precious little doggy. I have peace in my heart because I enjoy life and have learned to appreciate the small things that I’ve taken for granted in the past. I also love my job, which I find rewarding and fulfilling. 

I’ve been in the fashion industry — or “Rag Trade” — for 26 years. I’ve worked in garment manufacture, retail, and I’m now a consultant. First, I was a designer for children’s wear, and then a retail buyer who specialized in ladies wear. Later we moved to Seattle and created youlookfab.com. Instead of continuing a retail buying career, I started my own wardrobe consulting business in a brand new country on my own. I don’t think I’ll be so gutsy again, but glad I had the chutzpah at the time. I came up with a model that helps people with their wardrobe and style on a one-to-one basis — and the rest as they say is history. YLF and my wardrobe consulting business feed off of each other, and are in their 13th year. I have an amazing clientele who are the nicest people, and I happily share my experiences as a fashion professional with the YLF community for free.

I’ve accumulated a knowledge in different aspects of the same industry. And I’m extremely passionate about what I do. I feel a calling to help and encourage anyone who wants to develop and evolve their sense of style and have fun with fashion. I call myself a fashion stylist or wardrobe consultant, but these days I feel more like a style activist.

An activist is someone who campaigns to bring about political or social change, which is what I do in my own small way on YLF. Although it’s much better than it used to be, the fashion industry is still fraught with biases, sexist symbolism, ageism, and a lack of ethnic diversity. The concept of beauty and the ideal body type is based on a very narrow set of ideals that do little to encourage and empower women. Instead, a lot of fashion messaging communicates that there is something wrong with you when you don’t look a certain way. That you can’t feel attractive, look fabulous, dress wonderfully, or be stylish because you’re too old, wide, short, tall, asymmetrical, wrinkled, narrow, grey, round, straight, dark, pale, blemished, scarred, wobbly, hairy, dressy, casual, eccentric, tattooed… and the list goes on. These dated and demoralizing fashion concepts make me sad and angry. With every fibre of my being I believe that we can ALL have a great sense of style.

There is no one way to be stylish, no one way to look beautiful, and no one ideal body type. Style is not an age, dress size or budget. It’s an energy and confidence that is expressed through what you wear and how you wear it. As soon as you say that you can’t – I’m right there, saying, yes you can. Style is a puzzle that can be solved. It is not innate. It can be learned, refined and evolved throughout your life as we enjoy each leg of our style journey.

I’ve helped people find their personal styes across sizes US000 to US34, across heights 4ft 9 to 6ft 4, and across ages 16 to 81. They cover a range of nationalities, ethnicities, and genders. I have blind clients, clients with crutches, clients in wheelchairs, pregnant clients, and clients who have had full mastectomies. I’ve reviewed closets that are larger than most master bedrooms, and some smaller than a coat closet. I feel enormously fortunate to be exposed to a wide cross section of the female population because it keeps my mind open and constantly rethinking and challenging dated style concepts. It also makes me laugh at how fickle fashion can be, and how we must never take it too seriously.

There are no wrong sartorial choices but simply preferences that vary from person to person. There are no rules, but simply guidelines that you can take or leave at your discretion. Body type dressing is one approach, but is merely a starting point that helps you create a set of personal figure flattering priorities. Style is as diverse as the people in this world, and an appreciation for a look that is not your look shows respect and decency. So today, on my birthday, I’m celebrating YOU, your style, your beauty, your age, your love for fashion, and your positive energy. Help me shout from the rooftops that style is PERSONAL and should be encouraged and enjoyed at every size, lifestyle and budget.

Outfit Formula Toffee and Light Blue

Today’s look is about combining light blue with a toffee shade of brown. Think gorgeous blue skies and salted caramels, or the Caribbean sea with stroopwafels. This might be a combination you prefer to sport in Autumn and Winter, which is probably how I’ll wear it. Maybe throw in some chocolate brown and cream for good measure. But there’s no time like the present, so give the combination a go in Summer if you have the pieces.

Pretty much any combination of a shade of light blue with a shade of toffee will do. Faded denim and chambray count as light blue, and cognac or tan counts as toffee. Throw in a light blue and toffee pattern, or use amber jewellery as the toffee component. Here are some renditions to get you started.

1. Light Blue Top & Toffee Bottoms

Combine a toffee skirt, pair of pants, culottes or shorts with a light blue top that works with the bottoms. Finish off the outfit with white, red, tan or cognac footwear. Feel free to make the look casual or dressy. This outfit is dressy, but wear the same top with toffee chinos and white sneakers and you’re good to go.

MIU MIU Intarsia Stretch-knit Sweater

2. Toffee Top, White Bottoms & Light Blue Accessories

Combine a toffee top with white pants, skirt or shorts and finish off the look with light blue footwear and bag. You could sub the white bottoms for light blue jeans and throw in white or cognac footwear and bag instead.

CULT GAIA Poppy Lattice-trimmed Linen and Silk-blend Pouch

3. Light Blue Dress & Toffee Footwear

Choose a light blue dress in a pattern, light denim or chambray and complete the outfit with toffee footwear and bag. Or wear toffee footwear and throw in any colour bag. A blue and white striped dress is an easy way to wear a light blue pattern.

Adrianna Papell Plus Size Short Wrap Dress Long Sleeves

4. Light Blue Top, White Jeans & Toffee Bits

This is the simplest way to wear the combination. Combine white jeans with a light blue or chambray top, and complete the look with toffee tidbits like a cognac or tan bag, belt and shoes. Or throw in metallic footwear and wear amber jewellery.

ELIZABETH AND JAMES Francois Striped Voile Shirt