I have so many talking points on my outfit today! Are you ready for an epic read? Here we go!
1. Skirts in winter
In yet another sign of my gradual succumbing-to-wimpiness as I get older (the first was my admission that I now prefer low heels
to high ones), I have almost completely given up on wearing skirts in
the winter. When I first started my job, 10 out of my 18 outfits in the
month of January featured a dress or skirt. This January, all of my work
outfits that I can remember have included pants (and if I did wear a dress,
it was with comfy leggings underneath!). Almost every time I reached
into a closet and pulled out a dress or skirt (from my much smaller
selection than last year), I put it back again with a cringe, thinking
how complicated it is to wear a skirt in cold weather.
You basically have 4 choices:
- Wear the skirt with nothing on your legs and freeze.
- Wear the skirt with tall boots and freeze less—a challenge lately since the winds of fashion have been blowing towards low boots
- Wear the skirt with leggings and deal with loads of static cling
- Wear the skirt with tights or pantyhose, and deal with marginally less static cling, but instead have to deal with pantyhose!
None of these choices are very great, so usually I just pick Option 5: Wear pants.
But I'm back to doing One New Thing a Day with my winter clothes, and One of my remaining New Things was this lavender midi skirt.
2. This skirt
I
purchased this skirt on September 9th, and it is no reflection of my
lack of love for it that I haven't yet worn it. In fact, I'm not sure
why I haven't worn it, other than the fact that it's winter! But this
skirt is a fine specimen of skirt. Although the tags look like it was
made in the 80's at the latest, it is still in great condition. Although
the sizing is petite, meaning it runs the risk of being too short, its
hem actually hits my legs at that most flattering point where my calves
narrow below the knee. And while I initially worried it was too tight
around the waist, it still buttons (thank goodness for the elasticized
waistband!), and the rest of it skims my body like it was made just for
me!
I have to alter at least half of my new clothes just to make them look decent, so it is a rare treat to get something new that looks perfect with absolutely no tailoring! And it's a good thing it didn't need tailoring, because that half-pleated trumpet silhouette would have been ghastly to work around! But since it is a perfect fit, it's the perfect skirt! It reminds me of something Kate Middleton would wear. The question now is, can I style it to be worthy of its royal connotations?
I have to alter at least half of my new clothes just to make them look decent, so it is a rare treat to get something new that looks perfect with absolutely no tailoring! And it's a good thing it didn't need tailoring, because that half-pleated trumpet silhouette would have been ghastly to work around! But since it is a perfect fit, it's the perfect skirt! It reminds me of something Kate Middleton would wear. The question now is, can I style it to be worthy of its royal connotations?
3. This outfit
Upon
examination of my closet, I realized there were plenty of tops I could
wear with this skirt, but they were all more or less the same, in that
they were all a single solid color. I'm not much into wearing solid
colors when I can wear graphics instead, so maybe that's another reason I
haven't been wearing this skirt. However, given the lack of other
options, I eventually settled on a plain cream sweater.
Although
I would have liked to keep my legs warm in a pair of boots, one of my
least favorite outfit formulas is solid-color top +
different-solid-color bottom + different-solid-color boots. All those
colors stacked on top of each other make you look like a striped flag! I
had to settle for a neutral pair of pumps. Hello, frozen legs! I
brought a pair of sheer ivory hose to work with me, but when I got to
the office, I just couldn't stomach the idea of wearing nylons all day. I
went with bare legs and a space heater! To further mitigate the
striped-flag look, I decided to use a scarf to transcend the borders
between strips of color.
4. This scarf
Today I'm practicing a new way of tying the scarf at the neck—the figure 8. I made sure it had uneven tails so that the asymmetry would make it appear more jaunty, and so that one of them would dangle far enough to overlap my skirt. When wearing two different-color items on top and on bottom, literally connect the two with a vertical line—such as a scarf or vest. The physical link will help them seem more related. Striped-flag look? Not today!
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