Capsules, considered
Writing in The Guardian, Jess Carter-Morley says, "A fabulous capsule wardrobe is the sustainable way – which is to say the modern way – to raise your fashion game", citing exemplars like Sade and Audrey Hepburn.
Why, she wonders, do so many women agree, but not do it? Pick me to answer! We are programmed more toward cornucopia than capsule; dazzled with choice, our Inner Magpie darts to the new. Driven by emotion more often than need, we receive hefty cultural reinforcement for yielding to that urge—there are still plenty of trophy-shopping blogs around.
Lately, the capsule-focussed designer offers pre-selected sets for travel (e.g., one month in a carry-on), or for the spare wardrobe consistent with a minimalist aesthetic. Such makers include Helene Clarkson, the Canadian-made encircled, Vetta (who offer ten capsules, such as Elegant, Edgy, Minimalist). Others, like A Day, offer capsules as part of their collection.
Their designs tend toward the unstructured, often made from poly-cotton interlock or synthetics for seasonless wear and easy layering; some are reversible. You will not find bold patterns, which are too identifiable as "that same top she wore yesterday".
Some makers emphasize multi-purpose garments:
Left: Vetta's tiered wrap dress unsnaps from midi to mini length.
Right: Helene Clarkson's Zia dress is reversible, from a print to a solid, and you can turn it one way for a scoop neck, the other way for a crew. (I am not sure why you'd want to do this, but okay.)
Luxury minimalism
Carter-Morley mentions wardrobe. nyc, who deliver a box containing a blazer (shown in ecru; the black blazer is similar), shirt, t-shirt and pair of leggings for $US 1, 950, the sartorial equivalent of going to Canyon Ranch to figure out how to eat a sandwich. (There is also an 8-item option.)
They introduce themselves rather grandly ("wardrobe.nyc is a conceptual composite of luxury essentials, distilled into their purest and most desirable form...") and deliver strict, natural-fibre, Italian-made pieces that are the walking definition of sprezzatura.
One could copy their approach without spending so much, or by adding a piece at a time. To their credit, sizing is up to 2XL.
What, I wondered, is the benefit of an ecru wool blazer that must be drycleaned frequently? I'd consider A Day's washable Strategy blazer, $US 235. (A Day's size range is limited and off. Large—for them—is a US 10! I call that Medium.)
Uniform or capsule?
An important distinction: is one is interested in being a uniform dresser or a capsule dresser? You can be the former without being the latter, says the woman who once owned fourteen pairs of black trousers. Once you choose the capsule, even if it's generous, you must delimit your territory.
I don't believe any capsule works for all seasons either, unless you live in a terrarium. Two—fall/winter and spring/summer—is the minimum for most zones.
There there is no finer resource for creating a capsule of pieces you choose than Janice Riggs' blog, "The Vivienne Files". Her stealth agenda is to offer an alternative to scattershot buying, but she understands the emotional role of our clothes and loves colour—so she's not hard-line. To create capsules, see "Starting from Scratch", her illustrated series of articles. What a generous, talented stylist!
I predict the designer capsule-makers' market will shake out; the apparel business is overcrowded in this shaky economy. I like that their navy blue will match across seasons (and years), but buying everything in one place results in looking like a flight attendant, calmly coordinated but rather tight.
Whether self-built or pre-packaged, capsule collections are a valid slow-fashion strategy unless we are the sartorial version of my neighbour Emilie, who has at least three dozen different nutritional supplements on her pantry shelves, and has taken 90% of them only a few times.
She literally has too many capsules, but each seemed "the one" when she bought it!
Why, she wonders, do so many women agree, but not do it? Pick me to answer! We are programmed more toward cornucopia than capsule; dazzled with choice, our Inner Magpie darts to the new. Driven by emotion more often than need, we receive hefty cultural reinforcement for yielding to that urge—there are still plenty of trophy-shopping blogs around.
Lately, the capsule-focussed designer offers pre-selected sets for travel (e.g., one month in a carry-on), or for the spare wardrobe consistent with a minimalist aesthetic. Such makers include Helene Clarkson, the Canadian-made encircled, Vetta (who offer ten capsules, such as Elegant, Edgy, Minimalist). Others, like A Day, offer capsules as part of their collection.
Their designs tend toward the unstructured, often made from poly-cotton interlock or synthetics for seasonless wear and easy layering; some are reversible. You will not find bold patterns, which are too identifiable as "that same top she wore yesterday".
Some makers emphasize multi-purpose garments:
Left: Vetta's tiered wrap dress unsnaps from midi to mini length.
Right: Helene Clarkson's Zia dress is reversible, from a print to a solid, and you can turn it one way for a scoop neck, the other way for a crew. (I am not sure why you'd want to do this, but okay.)
Luxury minimalism
Carter-Morley mentions wardrobe. nyc, who deliver a box containing a blazer (shown in ecru; the black blazer is similar), shirt, t-shirt and pair of leggings for $US 1, 950, the sartorial equivalent of going to Canyon Ranch to figure out how to eat a sandwich. (There is also an 8-item option.)
They introduce themselves rather grandly ("wardrobe.nyc is a conceptual composite of luxury essentials, distilled into their purest and most desirable form...") and deliver strict, natural-fibre, Italian-made pieces that are the walking definition of sprezzatura.
One could copy their approach without spending so much, or by adding a piece at a time. To their credit, sizing is up to 2XL.
Photo: wardrobe.nyc |
What, I wondered, is the benefit of an ecru wool blazer that must be drycleaned frequently? I'd consider A Day's washable Strategy blazer, $US 235. (A Day's size range is limited and off. Large—for them—is a US 10! I call that Medium.)
Photo: thisisaday.com |
An important distinction: is one is interested in being a uniform dresser or a capsule dresser? You can be the former without being the latter, says the woman who once owned fourteen pairs of black trousers. Once you choose the capsule, even if it's generous, you must delimit your territory.
I don't believe any capsule works for all seasons either, unless you live in a terrarium. Two—fall/winter and spring/summer—is the minimum for most zones.
Photo: The Vivienne Files: "Starting from Scratch" article |
There there is no finer resource for creating a capsule of pieces you choose than Janice Riggs' blog, "The Vivienne Files". Her stealth agenda is to offer an alternative to scattershot buying, but she understands the emotional role of our clothes and loves colour—so she's not hard-line. To create capsules, see "Starting from Scratch", her illustrated series of articles. What a generous, talented stylist!
I predict the designer capsule-makers' market will shake out; the apparel business is overcrowded in this shaky economy. I like that their navy blue will match across seasons (and years), but buying everything in one place results in looking like a flight attendant, calmly coordinated but rather tight.
Whether self-built or pre-packaged, capsule collections are a valid slow-fashion strategy unless we are the sartorial version of my neighbour Emilie, who has at least three dozen different nutritional supplements on her pantry shelves, and has taken 90% of them only a few times.
She literally has too many capsules, but each seemed "the one" when she bought it!
Comments
I have made a pledge to buy less but better quality in the European way, but I must admit I love clothes and do fall off the wagon and not occasionally. I have many more summer things than winter as they're only worn once before washing but I personally don't mind having my winter clothes dry cleaned, so that's not an issue for me when purchasing. I do however wash many things that say dry clean only.
I agree entirely about the all season wardrobe. When I see that advertised I always think to myself you sure don't live where it's 90 degrees and humid in the summer and minus 90 in the winter.
Vivienne Files has been very helpful in paring down the wardrobe as has this blog. Jewelry acquisition has had a slight up tick. Lol
LauraJ: I'd like to try that $2K capsule (or an expanded one, as they now allow you to buy the number of pieces you want) and see what happens. But $CAN 600 for a knit skirt?!
Re: capsules, my opinion on my closet just underwent a bit of a course correction--nothing like packing in advance of wildfires to get your attention. Now that we are home and safe (except for horrible air quality), I am doing a major "life cleaning" ... under the circumstances, I don't want to call it a "death cleaning."
Venasque, I once read an article by a theater costume/wardrobe person indicating that MUCH of what says dry clean can be washed. I suspect it ran in "Threads" magazine, but am not sure.
I remember buying Susie Faux's book Wardrobe back in the day, which built on the capsule wardrobe thing, but with much more brio.
But I can see that this sort of thing could be a useful gateway into owning far fewer clothes, which I think makes it much easier to dress well.
Now I'm retired, I have happily eliminated whole categories of clothing and really enjoy my slender wardrobe - everything is visible and there's no packing away of seasonal clothes. Much easier!
That said, I live in a temperate maritime climate, and I appreciate that others have to cope with farmore extreme temperatures...
Jane in London: a little jewellery would help there! And there is a certain type of woman who embraces that super-clean, ultra-edited look. Just looked at my closet: colour for summer but come winter, back to darks, at least on the bottom. The woman with a temperate climate has an easier time; here we range through 60 Celsius degrees over the course of a year.
Bee: Your remark that "a truly small wardrobe has become less important to me" intrigues me; my own experience is an ebb and flow. What I really wear is the same roughly 20 pieces in a season, not including sleepwear or exercise clothes.
Hummingbird5: You nailed the big difference: who chooses. This is a sartorial equivalent of Weight Watchers vs Jenny Craig. I appreciated the former because I got to choose, other women preferred that the decision was made by someone else. And some years I just can’t enjoy trying to find a new (but essentially the same) v-neck with just the right v.
In Canada, I find that Simons has good quality organic cotton and supima cotton (some a bit glacé) tees for a good price (remember prices are in CDN $$). https://www.simons.ca/simons/search/search.jsp?Dy=1&Nty=1&Ntt=t-shirt+supima But some are very ample this season and those don't suit everyone.
One thing I will never own as long as I have black cats is a white tee!