Fashion Tips
To suit your lifestyle
Do you need fashion tips?
Do you find yourself saying: "I have nothing to wear!" while going through your closet that is full of clothes?
Does your significant other hide every time you're getting dressed for a special occasion?
Well, I can totally relate.
My closet used to be filled with useless, mismatched tops and bottoms and "special dresses" that I couldn't possibly wear for the second time.
Every time I was getting ready to go out I had "nothing to wear" and although I never left the house naked, I hated going through the frustration of not knowing what to wear.
And then I discovered an e-book filled with fashion tips, by Diana Pemberton-Sikes, a wardrobe and image consultant.
I highly suggest it to any woman who wants to transform her unruly closet from bad to "wow!"
and never have a frustrating moment when getting ready to go out.
Following is an article written by Diana Pemberton-Sikes with some basic fashion tips on how to choose your wardrobe, based on your lifestyle.
Basic Fashion Tips
"My Nana's coming for a visit this week," I
overheard one little girl tell her friend on a
playground recently. "I got a special outfit to
wear when we pick her up at the airport."
The sentence made me smile and shake my head.
Ah, yes. I remember those days.
Special outfits.
Special outfits for special occasions like dates,
parties, or speeches. Or weddings. Or funerals.
Or graduations. Heck, we even used to get special
outfits for school or holiday pictures. In fact,
we rarely went shopping for clothes; we went
shopping for special outfits.
Then when the event was over, the outfit usually
just hung in the closet as a reminder of what
we'd worn when. New function? New outfit!
Heaven forbid we should be seen in the same thing
twice.
Sound familiar?
It's an expensive habit that can add up quickly,
particularly if you've never shopped any other
way. If you tend to shop by outfit, then what
I'm about to reveal may hit you like the
proverbial "ton of bricks."
Are you ready for fashion tips?
It's cheaper to plan and buy a wardrobe than to
fill your closet with special outfits.
Let me put it to you another way: it's cheaper
to plan a week of menus and go buy groceries than
it is to eat out every night.
Now the second one seems obvious. If you take
your family to a restaurant or through a drive
thru every night for dinner, you could easily
spend several hundred dollars in a week. The
entrees, the beverages, the tips - it all adds up
pretty quickly. If you've ever eaten out every
meal while on vacation, you know this is true.
And when you consider that a lot of families do
this ALL THE TIME, it's no wonder everyone's
squawking about the high cost of food.
So let's apply that same analogy to your closet.
Let's say that instead of planning and buying
what you need at the beginning of a season, that
you buy a new outfit as needed every time
something comes up. Buying outfit by outfit may
seem cheaper than buying a bunch of clothes at
once, but if you consider that when you buy a new
outfit, you often buy new shoes, hosiery, and
other accessories to go with it, you can easily
see how costs add up. That $40 "great" deal can
suddenly become $200 worth of shoes and jewelry
that doesn't go with anything else you own.
So what's a better strategy?
Well, first, to GET a strategy. To deliberately
plan how you're going to spend your money on
clothes.
Here are a few things to consider:
1. Your Lifestyle
Look at how you spend your waking hours over the
course of a week. If it looks something like
this:
Work - 60%
Social - 20%
Leisure - 20%
Then your wardrobe should consist of 60% work,
20% social (church, parties, visiting, etc.), and
20% leisure (running errands, watching TV,
cleaning house) appropriate attire.
If you're a stay-at-home mom and your time is
spent like this:
With Kids - 80%
Social - 10%
Leisure - 10%
Then your wardrobe should reflect this with 80%
of what you wear appropriate to work with kids,
10% appropriate for social activities, and 10%
appropriate for leisure time.
Adjust this according to your particular
situation.
2. Your Budget
You should spend anywhere from 3-10% of what you
earn on clothing. If you wear a uniform to work,
you'll probably spend less (3%); if you're in a
high profile position (defense lawyer, socialite,
television personality), you'll probably spend
more (10%). The average person should spend
around 6%.
REMEMBER: This figure correlates to your
household income and expenses. So if your
household income is $50,000 per year, for
example, you should allocate approximately 6% (or
$3,000) to clothe EVERYONE in the household. If
your household income is $100,000 per year, then
you have $6,000 (6%) to spread among the family.
This isn't per person, unless you live alone.
This is per household.
Once you know what kinds of clothes should be in
your wardrobe and how much you should allocate in
your budget, see how your closet stacks up. If
your lifestyle is:
Work - 60%
Social - 20%
Leisure - 20%
But your existing wardrobe is:
Work - 90%
Social - 3%
Leisure - 7%
Then it's no wonder you start looking for
something to wear whenever you're extended an
invitation, or that your errand clothes have
holes in them because you wear the same two or
three things all the time. It's because your
wardrobe doesn't match your lifestyle.
So how do you fix it? With these fashion tips:
1. Fill in The Gaps
Go spend some of your budget to fill in the gaps
so that your closet reflects your lifestyle.
2. Buy Mix-and-Match Items
Buy items that you can mix-and-match with other
pieces in your wardrobe, not something that can
only be worn one way.
3. Decide on A Color Scheme
If you look best in black, white, and blue, buy
clothes in those colors and maybe only two or
three more (like red, taupe, and green). If you
lean toward a warm palette of gold, ivory, and
brown, then buy clothes in those colors and maybe
two or three more (French navy, camel, peach).
Why? Because they'll mix-and-match with each
other, as will your accessories. You'll get a
lot more "bang" for your money.
4. Stick To Your Budget
Once you've determined how much you can spend on
yourself for a season, make a list of what you
need to fill in the gaps, and head to the store
with CASH. No charge cards, checks, etc. You'll
find yourself carefully considering each
purchase, and be a lot less likely to impulse
buy. The end result? You'll only buy what you
need.
Planning your wardrobe purchases DOES take time
and a little practice, but can yield you great
rewards. You'll become better at working with
what you already own instead of always assuming
you need something new. Not only does this save
you money, it also reduces all that closet
clutter so you can actually see what you have so
you can wear what you own.
====================================
This Fashion Tips article was written by Diana Pemberton-Sikes who is a wardrobe and image
Consultant, and author of "Wardrobe Magic," a
fun ebook that shows women how to transform their
unruly closets into workable, wearable wardrobes.
Visit her online at:
http://www.wardrobemagic.com
I hope you found Fashion Tips beneficial. If you have any comments, questions or suggestions, please contact me.
I am here to help!
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