How to Manage a Wardrobe That’s Too Large

There is no one wardrobe size to rule them all. The right size is large enough to service your needs and small enough to organize, manage and afford. A wardrobe is too large when it’s overwhelming, hard to manage, and items are difficult to store. You can’t see the wood for the trees. If this is your situation, here’s what you can do to bring back closet calm.

1. Edit

Wardrobe editing effectively reduces the size of your wardrobe. Take a fast or slow approach and go through everything. Ask for help when things feel challenging. It’s an enormously satisfying and productive process that helps you control and make sense of your wardrobe. The more frequently you edit, the easier and faster the process.

2. Organize

Improve the way you store wardrobe items. When your closet is tidy, you can pack more efficiently in limited spaces. Items are visible and easy to retrieve, so you see exactly what your options are, and can grab what tickles your fancy.

3. Display Relevant Seasons

Store what’s seasonally relevant for the next six months in your available storage spaces and pack up the rest. Repeat the process when the seasons change. This is especially effective when you live in a four season climate. Choosing daily outfits is simplified when you limit what is at your disposal to wear.

4. Limit Additions and Make Thoughtful Decisions

When you’ve edited, tidied up, and organized, limit wardrobe additions by being extra thoughtful about what earns a future place in your wardrobe. If you want to add to what you have, you’ll need to edit more frequently in order to stick to an optimally sized wardrobe. If you don’t do this, you’ll be back to feeling overwhelmed when the additions come rolling in.

5. Digital Representation of Your Wardrobe

It’s handy to keep an up to date digital representation of your wardrobe through a phone app, or with YLF Finds. That way you see your entire wardrobe at the press of a button so that you always know what you have. This is easier and faster than looking at your wardrobe stored throughout your home. Seeing the items more easily will allow you to make sense of what you have, helping you to control and manage any size of wardrobe.

Sometimes clients hire my services precisely because they need help paring down their too-large wardrobes. We always complete steps #1, #2, and sometimes step #3. Step #4 is the responsibility of the client, and step #5 is something I encourage clients to do if they haven’t done so already.

These steps are not exhaustive. Feel free to share how you’ve managed a too large wardrobe in the comments section.

Outfit Formula: A Side of Mustard

Earthy mustards vary in shade and tone. Some are more brown, and others more yellow. Chartreuse can be thought of as mustard too. If you enjoy wearing earth tones, you might enjoy a small or large side of mustard in your wardrobe. You might prefer it in a pattern, as bottoms, in a bag, or as a pair of shoes instead of an item of clothing. 

Some outfit ideas for Team Mustard:

1. Patterned Mustard

Here’s a navy and mustard pattern mixed delight. A casual navy, white and mustard plaid midi dress is topped with a mustard and navy fair isle vest. White sneakers worn with mustard socks match the white and mustard in the outfit. A navy trench coat tops the lot. Add a bag that matches the palette.

Patterned Mustard

2. Bubblegum Mustard

A mustard and fuschia midi dress is topped with a bubblegum verging on pink neon maxi coat. Chocolate brown ankle strap pumps that bookend the model’s dark brown hair are the shoes of choice. I see a mustard or pink bag complete the look.

Bubblegum Mustard

3. Cobalt Mustard

A cobalt dress is topped with a long cobalt cardigan. It’s un-buttoned and cinched at the waist with a black belt for denintion. Black socks and mid-thigh boots match the back hair of the model. I see an earth toned bag as the bag of choice.

Cobalt Mustard

4. Mix It All Up Mustard

Here’s a fabulous mash-up of mustard with unexpected colours. A cinnamon funnel neck vest tops a white shirt with enormous cuffs. The shirt is untucked to showcase the layered effect. This pairing graces a pair of super wide blush trousers. A short mustard jacket tops the lot. The cropped length of the jacket offsets the volume of the rest of the outfit. Black shoes and bag are the finishing touches and match the model’s hair. Add jewellery, eyewear, and watch as desired.

Mix It All Up Mustard

Repeating Colours to Pull a Look Together

Match the colours of bags, belts, footwear, eyewear, hats, or scarves with one another to pull together a look. Matching two items is enough, but more also works. Also consider matching your hair colour to your shoes, an accessory, or clothing item. 

Repeat Colour For Cohesion

Matching or complementing solid and patterned clothing and accessories with eye colour makes your eyes pop. White and cream outfit items can match the whites of eyes and teeth. Pinks, peaches, and earth tones can match your complexion.

Colour repetition is not essential, but it’s useful. Sometimes when a look is missing its finishing touch, it will come together when you repeat some of the colours. Remember that colour repetition that relies on a handbag is lost when you put it down for the day.

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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Refreshing My Bra Capsule with Something New

I’ve been replenishing my bra capsule with exactly the same Simone Perele bras for almost a decade and I really want to change things up. Four years ago I tried to do so and was unsuccessful. I ordered twenty bras from a range of brands, hoping something would work as well as the Simone Pereles. Nothing did. 

I love bras and enjoy wearing them, so recently I tried again. I prefer lace bras with full cup coverage and an underwire. The prettier the bra with knickers to match, the more fab I feel in my undies. I wear a narrow fit 30D.

I went to Nordstrom and tried on twenty bras in their dressing room. Most were the incorrect size. The fits were wrong on the few that were the right size. I was none the wiser.

I was determined, so when I got back home I ordered eight bras in a 30D. Pickings were less slim than four years ago. A welcome change. Sizing was inconsistent. Some fit perfectly, while others ran wider on the band and bigger in the cup. But to my surprise I found four new bras that are comfortable, fit correctly, are cheaper than the Simone Pereles, and prettier too. You can see them in the collection below.

My old Simone Perele bras have a very smooth cup, so they’re great to wear under tighter tops. The new lacier bras scratch my itch for something new and work well under most things. For now I’m sorted with bras, and shopping for knickers to match.

Outfit Formula: Soft Pinks

This is for Team Soft Pink as we head into Autumn in the northern hemisphere. Think pink pastels, mid-tones, and antique pinks with a greyed or murky integrity. There are solids and patterns, and an emphasis on neutrals when retailers style these soft pinks in outfits. 

Onto some outfit ideas. If the items don’t tickle your fancy, find inspiration in the colour palettes.

1. Antique Pink, Grey, and Chocolate Brown

A pastel antique pink polo sweater is combined with a pair of dark grey wide cropped jeans. A dark chocolate brown complement of tall boots, crossbody bag and belt add a polished touch to the outfit. A mid-tone antique pink jacket that is tonal to the sweater, tops the lot. Delicious colours with the model’s ginger hair.

Antique Pink, Grey and Chocolate Brown

2. Blush, Tan and Plaid

Blush is a light pink with a tan integrity. Like a pink tan. Here a blush sweater and puffer jacket in almost the same colour create a matched set effect. They top a pair of relaxed straight cropped earthy plaid pants with a blush stripe running through them. Creamy taupe dressy bag and casual lace-up boots complete the look.

Blush Tan and Plaid

3. Rose, Black and Grey

A rose sweater is paired with black slouchy trousers. Black boots match the bottoms and bookend the model’s hair. A charcoal sweater is draped around the model’s shoulders like a scarf. Grey is great with soft pink!

Rose Black and Grey

4. Lemonade and Lime

This iteration is my favourite. I love the addition of the lime. With a shorter blazer, you can send the outfit to me. A strawberry lemonade pants suit is combined with a soft pink and lime ‘70s silk blouse. It’s tucked the way most blouses and shirts were in the ‘70s. Cream boots work beautifully with the soft palette, keeping things light and pretty. Add a cream or tan bag to match. Add jewellery, eyewear and watch as desired.

Lemonade and Lime

I bat for Team Pink. I enjoy wearing shocking pink and bubblegum pink with a side of neon the most. That said, I enjoy wearing pastel pinks and bat for Team Soft Pink too. Currently, I have these soft pink items in my wardrobe. I wear them with shades of white, blue denim, orange, red, lime and citron. My iPhone case is a soft pastel pink, and I particularly love my pastel pink specs.

How about you?