Not this... |
Working at The Lovely Boutique allows me to eavesdrop on women's minds. In the brief course of a transaction I can often get a handle on what makes us tick. And believe me, we all have different tick-tocks.
The other day a customer asked if she could wear brown boots with the print dress she had just bought. I answered of course she could. The boots didn't have to match; they would blend. "Matching is easy for me", she said. "I have trouble with blending."
There is a difference. Matching means those two navies match. That red handbag matches those red shoes. It's really difficult to match navy— or black or any color. And matching accessories has been a no-no for so long, it might actually become Fashion again. For now, matchy-match is OUT.
So how does one blend??? In an era of very few fashion rules, there are some guidelines— helpful I hope.
Big + small(er) sideways |
> Pattern
Pair big with small. Big with big equals sofa upholstery. Small with small is too ditsy to make the point. Certain rules still apply: Big on top if you are smaller there. Small on top if you are bigger there.
Geo-lovely |
Flora-licious |
> Geometric vs. floral
Geometrics pair well with other geometrics. Likewise florals with florals. Exception: when you mimic coloration you can mix florals and geometrics. Let's call that the graduate degree. Animal prints work with everything.
Always exceptions... |
> Color versus shade
Colors don't always have to "go together" in the traditional sense. The same grey value or shades of colors can work together. Squint your eyes; if the edges of the colors seem to disappear they are probably similar shades.
> Color chameleons
Sometimes colors take on more of a hue when they are next to another color. Taupes and greys can appear more lavender or more yellow, depending... Likewise, the light (incandescent vs fluorescent vs daylight) can make a difference. Argghhh!
Neutral rest stop |
> Pop with a neutral
Just as three pieces make an outfit, the third piece in mixing patterns can be a neutral— a rest for the eye. This is the best way to get into mixing patterns if you are taking baby steps.
> Trust your instincts
Theories aside, if it doesn't work for you, it doesn't work. Period.
Likewise, if it does it does. |
Some good advice here! "It doesn't have to match; it has to go." is one of my "rules". I also recommend to people that they look to nature when unsure if a colour will go with another colour. Trees (brown/greens/reds), skies (blue, white, grey) and flowers (everything!) - if colours work in nature, they will work in an outfit.
ReplyDeleteThank you. And nature pulls off some crazy combos, too!
DeleteGREAT post. I'm printing this one. A keeper. I'm ready to experiment and to stop wearing all solids, all the time. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteA kick that you like my post! Let me know how you do. I guarantee once you've mastered the style, wearing all solids will be "in" again.
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