November 7, 2024
This painting both delights and confounds me; I think that’s good!
This heroine is committed to the beige core of her wardrobe, and her unusual assortment of accent colors – two soft ones, three bright ones.
But there are no rules about this kind of thing, so it makes sense ONLY to choose what delights you.
Coming into November, our heroine has a lovely, wide-ranging assortment of tops:
And she owns three dresses! Maybe sometime, she’ll come across a printed dress, or a pastel one, that speaks to her. And I’m sort of tickled that she has the same pants in yellow AND orange. If you love something, there’s no reason to avoid a duplicate…
Her scarves and jewelry are pretty delectable:
And she’s the rare woman with TWO pairs of orange shoes. They’re quite different styles, so why not?
When she sets out to make necessary additions to her wardrobe, she has only some vague thoughts… a bright accent or two, something WARMER (even for a heroine who lives in a warm climate, sweaters and such might be necessary).
For accessories, she just keeps her eyes open, and her “whappage meter” turned on full blast…
For some of us, it might make a lot of sense to focus on one “need” at a time, like buying a dressy suit and tops all at the same time, like yesterday’s heroine did.
But if you can remember all of the various things that you need, you can get all of your shopping done at once!
Her new clothes give her at least eight new outfits, but I will only show you eight…
Of all of the wardrobes we’re looking at right now, this is the one that would drive me crazy – I do NOT want a bunch of different colors in my wardrobe. Maybe I’m an exception?
love,
Janice
p.s. Ten years ago, I started with a photograph of books, as the inspiration for our wardrobe of the day! It’s a lovely photo…
Sheila says
I don’t know if you are an exception, I do know I have a closet of many colors. Somewhere here referred to a “crayon” closet? The thing that drives me crazy on this is having both bright and pastel colors. To me that doesn’t make sense. However, it doesn’t have to. I like the overall feel of this one better than yesterday’s “dressiness”, and the one flower scarf is just amazing.
Sheila says
someone here – not somewhere. jheez.
Wendy says
I’m sure you’re not a rare exception, Janice, but I would guess there are loads of women like me who need more colour. I could probably quite happily live with a wardrobe built on today’s template, only using my preferred colours: navy, white and the cool colours on the colour wheel (plus a couple of shots of pink or magenta).
All of my bottoms and second layers are solid colours as are many of my tops. But I find I need pattern and that comes out in my scarves and tops. Paisley, stars, a few florals, polka dots and a couple of very different striped dresses all keep it interesting – yet surprisingly interchangeable – for me.
Single or dual-toned wardrobes make me feel like an exception but I know that no one is an outlier. Vive la difference! 😄
Cindy says
My wardrobe is primarily blue, white and like Wendy, has a bit of pink. I plan to start eliminating the white as those items wear out The brassy tones of my white hair is most evident when wearing white. So I have very little variation in color in my wardrobe and I wear only solids. A real oddball! For some reason though, I feel like chucking my whole beautiful blue wardrobe and wearing all black lately.
Pepper from Minnesota says
You could try replacing the white with a warmer undertoned cream. My grandma did that when it turned out her white hair was sort of brassy. She looked lovely in cream or antique white and ghastly in pure white.
Deb says
Oh, Janice, I love what you do but we are so different! First, I avoid black, especially above the waist, but I also think I’d wither up and die if I only had four or five colors in my wardrobe. I look at the wardrobes with only one accent color and admire the woman who is content like that. But I’d be depressed within a week. Color and variety are extremely important to me. I doubt I have ever worn an all neutral outfit more than once or twice a year. So, while I’d only consider wearing the green in this wardrobe, the feel of it appeals to me.
Debbie says
I love colors and wear with my green base red orange purple and turquoise. But I’m not crazy about the pastels with these brights in today’s wardrobe. Love the brights, just the mix feels awkward. Maybe it’s the combo of the pastels being pink and blue. I wonder how it would feel if the pastels were green yellow and orange.
Pepper from Minnesota says
I have to agree that this wardrobe is the one that appeals to me the least. Mixing bright spring colors (if you’re using seasonal color analysis) along with light summer pastels is really jarring. I don’t know if anyone would be able to fit both styles. The basic values of those two seasons are so completely opposite as to boggle any attempts at mingling them satisfactorily.
If I were to redo this one, I would look at the undertones of the person wearing it. If she looks better in cool colors, we would drop the warm and bright tones like a hot potato. If she has warm golden tones in her skin, the pastels would be gone in a flash.
Then we would do the same for her neutral. Focus more on warm creamy beiges if she’s going for warm colors, and softer more muted cool beige if she’s going with the pink and blue.
If we still wanted the wide variety of color, you could translate them from one season to the other.
For a summer, the bright green could become a muted jade or soft mint. The orange could be shifted to a soft pinky peach, and the bright yellow to a pastel lemon.
For a spring, the pink could become a hot fuschia and the baby blue could become a vibrant turquoise.
Either way, I think it would tie the wardrobe together more harmoniously and make it much more joyful to look at and to try to wear.
It’s really fun thinking through what I would do to tweak it for different people!! Thank you so much for making this one such a challenge!!