Four tiny style pick-me-ups for the end of winter
How to break bland dressing patterns without feeling like you look like you’ve lost your mind
You know how I know March malaise is real? Because I was walking my kids to school sometime last week and out of seemingly nowhere, Laura started to scream at the top of her lungs that walking to school is boring and she hates it. But I knew exactly what she meant because this is that great time of year when I myself start to feel like a wilting rib of celery swimming inside the same soup of myself, where the best clothes I can muster are the ones hanging over my bathtub (crusty leggings) and the days blend into each other.
On the morning that Laura self-expressed, I suggested we go another way. So we turned a corner we don’t usually turn and got down on our knees and started crawling.
And it didn’t last for more than like 6 seconds because the sidewalks are cold and the cement is too rigid to support three pairs of nearly-bare knees dragging across it but you know what the exercise did do? It cracked us all up! Madeline too. And broke a pattern we — me and Laura — both wanted out of.
Sometimes I think I mistake routines for patterns and vice versa. The way I’m coming to understand the difference is like, routines are the tangible, material rituals you set, which are healthy when you use them to keep you accountable to responsibilities/yourself. They can also provoke a sense of safety or familiarity in a new environment.
Patterns on the other hand are more like…psychic/tacit routines that form. Between you and yourself, you and the closest among you, etc., etc. They’re more complicated in that we don’t always know the patterns exist in us the same way we know a routine has been forged — like we inherit some patterns from our upbringings so just assume “this is how I am,” then we layer new patterns on top of the old ones and before you know it, a 5-year-old is losing her shit on the corner of 86th street and her mom totally gets it but has a choice: reinforce the pattern (by telling her to stop yelling, by ignoring the underlying bemoan altogether, by trying to suffocate her frustration as a way to, I guess, numb out my own) or break the hell out of it!
Get on the floor! Try a new way! Send those crusty ass leggings to the laundromat and put on a pair of red tights.
There was something refreshing and bright and perspective widening and new about choosing another way. It felt like I was opening a window I’d just discovered that would free me from the room with the small windows and low ceilings and now I keep thinking, where else can I do this, how else can I do this?
Kids are a wonderful way to learn more about you, to build resilience and grow into whoever you know, or suspect your highest self can be. It is genuinely my belief that clothes can help through this process too. Not as saliently, or interactively, or as literally — it’s more like the clothes represent what could become future action, they’re more like an omen than the action itself, but it’s a good time of year to practice breaking patterns with your clothes. The lowest stakes way I recommend doing this is by employing tiny style risks that throw your route off course in the slightest, but still most delightful way. Here are four examples of what I mean:
#1. Wear a headband with whatever else you’d wear right now.
They do something feminine to an otherwise masculine look:
And something really tender and youthful to an otherwise matronly look.
I think I have too many images of Miuccia Prada taking her post-show bow lodged into my brain right now
As if observing, analyzing, and ultimately recreating her style is going to summon the same kind of creative prowess and enable my own brain creating this-as-art:
But anyway, the rules of this rec are simple: keep your outfit’s color palette pretty basic. Stay with greys and blacks and browns and ivory. Be comfortable. If you tend to go boyish, opt for a blazer. If your vibe is more girlish, a straight-line skirt or maybe a dress or a skirt with a shape like the white one above or perhaps more exaggerated, like this one.
Feel like yourself in tried and true clothes then add the headband to surprise yourself. Mentioned this in last Friday’s letter of rec, too, but 10/10 am planning to incorporate the headband into my summer uniform of a light blue button-down and low-slung drawstring poplin shorts.
Some headbands I’d recommend: this thin solid one from Etsy, for $5.
Or the slightly more substantial one, in a richer color (in partic the green) from Hill House Home for $35.
This beaded one, which is just like the one I got my daugther/wish I’d gotten for myself at a market in Mexico City for $21.90
This thick, acrylic one, which I can feel ramming into the area behind my ears already, but which will also give you a big Carolyn Besette energy for $7.55.
And then, the motherlode of fancy: Alaia says “Wear me,” and the people say, “How much?”
#2. Make like Bottega and double your shirts.
There are two ways I’d recommend doing this. The first way is a more literal approximation of how Bottega’s double shirt was shown on the Spring 2023 runway, with an a-line skirt that reached about knee-length.
I did the double shirt here with this pink Chris Kane number. It works because the shirts are relatively masculine, so that adds a new dynamic when paired with the ultra-feminine skirt (organza, lace).
And then the shoes are leather, so there’s your dose of rough. Not sure what to do with the evidence that my feet are blending into the snake print — like they are actually the same color and texture
So let’s move on to another way you can interpret the shirt on shirt:
A basic color plus a vibrant color, which actually nicely reflects at least three instances that pointed toward a color trend from ~the runways~ of last month.
My winter strategy when shopping is to always buy my pants 1 size bigger than I wear in the summer them so that layers tuck in more easily. Layering button-downs helps to carry the use case over, even though the shirts you layer should be pretty lightweight.
When you’re picking your shirts, if you’re going to do this, I’d go for your flimsiest poplins (LMND’s are great, as you know) or linen/gauze (here is a reference for fabric). Linen/gauze would actually look great with a pair of leather pants/a skirt a la this, this.
Unless stiff cuffs are important to you, in which case a moderately fine poplin might be a better choice.
The tip sheet at the bottom has thoughts on color pairings but the low-stakes-risk gist is: one neutral, one color. And I think the flimsier collars in picture A work better than the stiffer ones in B.
#3: An ornate belt
As evidenced above in the second look! But also:
An easy, very quick add to almost any outfit that is streamlined and wreaks of good taste but needs a tiny bit of roughening up (examples: solid color button down and trousers, button down and jeans, a suit with the jacket styled as the shirt, or how about a pencil skirt with loopholes like this, worn with a t-shirt). I went two degrees further than “a tiny bit” for the rough up by wrapping a sweater around my waist, thus forging the effectivity of two belts even if it doesn’t look like it (efficient optical illusions!), then I added a pair of flat slingback sandals styled with grey socks to keep the weight of the look at center.
#4: A kooky bag
I think the thing about a kookly belt or a bag that works so well to add a tiny pick-me-up to an outfit (and actually, this is true of a headband) is that the risk is detachable, like you can physically eliminate it if you feel it’s not right, even after you’ve left your home.
Kept the tones in the grey family across the board, playing only with the shades of charcoal grey I’d employ. It’s a good color to use as a springboard to brighter, more vibrant colors, in particular when those colors register as risks (I don’t wear a lot of yellow), or when the item you’re going out on a limb with has so much going on that you either have to go balls to the walls with how much you’ll put on or really find confidence letting it take center stage.
Alternative to kooky bags is the time-tested style of layering one on top of another:
Originally approximated on the Bottega Veneta runway for Spring 2023 in September 2022, then recreated in the aisle of cereal the subsequent October, this is still a pretty good way to add a dose of maximalism to whatever minimalism you’re engendering. I like it in particular with an all-black look because the straw bag breaks up the harshness of that bright orange against the black. Straw is like an equalizing neutral that can balance the severity of two other colors (or black).
And finally, not really #5, but kind of #5, this one is more of a reminder because it’s still cold enough: wear colored tights!
It’s hip, it’s cool, it’s funky, it’s fresh.
And that sums it up, thanks for tuning in and see you next week at the Cafe!