This article is part of a series in which individualized information for each is conveyed in the info graphic and subsequent copy below it.
Articles on capsule wardrobes usually begin with the author singing their praises as a cures-all to the current plague of wardrobe malady. It is, after all, hard (at least for me) to conjure the image of the woman who does not wish to buy fewer, better quality clothes (none of which sit languishing in the back of the closet) while still being effortlessly well dressed with plenty of options for any occasion. And I’m no different, either when it comes to myself or for my clients.
That being said, even if you are a woman who works in a professional office 4-5 days per week and a Light Spring, buying exactly what is shown here will likely not work that way for you. The reason is quite simple – it wasn’t chosen for you, so it won’t have taken your body type, your features, your particular eye hair and skin tone within your season, your personality, your lifestyle, your climate or any number of other factors into consideration. And a wardrobe, be it capsule or otherwise, that provides the effortless ease many women seek will necessarily need to factor in all of that. (As an aside, if you want to talk more about how to make it all work for you, I’d be happy to talk). This group of items was chosen in the abstract, and a wardrobe without a woman to wear it is, to a certain degree, just a bunch of clothes.
However, when women find their season, they can often struggle to imagine how those colors translate into actual clothing at all. So, I urge you to take this not as instruction on what should go in YOUR wardrobe, but simply as a guide to show how Light Spring colors can be used in a real world concept of A wardrobe.
In creating these capsule examples, I have decided to use 4 neutrals from each palette and 3 colors. These were chosen largely because they are some of the easiest colors to find in shops for the particular season, and to some degree also to have a mix of colors that didn’t look too monotone. So here for Light Spring we have pearl grey, blush, shell beige and cream as neutral colors, paired with coral, pool blue, and mint green..
Just as dark season women bemoan their lack of light colors (which they do of course have), light season women seem forever on the quest for darker colors. Of course, they do have darker colors within the palette than used here, but perhaps more to the point is to note that there is only a very rare occasion in which a woman of this coloring needs particularly dark colors to wear, given that she looks sophisticated, adult and professional in her soft wash of light neutrals and colors, and arguably more so than when she delves into autumn neutrals and attempts to pair them with spring color.
For the pieces, I’ve chosen 1 jacket, 1 sweater, 8 blouses, 2 skirts, 3 pairs of pants, 2 pairs of shoes, 2 necklaces, and a purse that could be worn without switching from outfit to outfit for a total of 20 pieces. It’s not a miniature capsule, but it’s far less than almost any woman I’ve ever worked with owns. I’ve shown ten outfits, enough for 2 full work weeks for a woman who works 5 days in an office, though in theory dozens more could be made. This particular combination was envisioned for the sort of “dress for your day” offices many women I have worked with have to dress for, meaning that there’s a range from more formal outfits for important meeting days to more comfortable, casual options.
I hope this has been helpful for you as a step towards envisioning your own wardrobe in the colors that make you look and feel vibrant and beautiful.
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