Tailoring Your Wardrobe: Making it Work and Suit You
Very few of us in this fashion are lucky enough to both know
exactly what we want and what suits us. While ‘normie’ fashion guidelines such
as what flatters different body shapes still apply, due to the lolita
silhouette often you won’t know what you feel best in until you try – and that
may take some trial and error to figure out. Ultimately we want to feel
gorgeous in this fashion, so here are some of my tips on how to tailor your
wardrobe to work for you.
1. Stay Patient and Keep Trying
This sounds like the kind of advice you normally leave for
last, although I feel it’s the most important one. It’s especially vital to
reiterate it now, that we’re in full swing of the Wardrobe Post Season and many
feel pressure and/or envy when looking through other people’s collections.
Finding out what works for you style and fit-wise takes time – and then you
need to add extra time to actually build a collection based on that knowledge! Some
people go through a couple of pieces and some through dozens, some people
manage that in one year and some take ten. Of course it’s discouraging when the
search gets longer and you still ‘feel like a potato’, to use contemporary
slang, but for as long as lolita fashion brings you joy and fun, keep at it. Each
mistake is a lesson in what you don’t like on yourself, which ultimately brings
you closer to the lolita that you will blossom into. And do your best to avoid
comparing yourself to others. It sounds cheesy, but cacti don’t compare
themselves to roses – they might both be prickly and (some) bloom, but they’re
ultimately different.
2. Get Things that Fit Right
As a big part of my 2018/2019 eureka moment, I am determined
to only keep pieces that fit me well. It makes the world of a difference when
the clothes you love don’t make you feel uncomfortable in any way. This covers
a range of things, from having to squeeze yourself in to something to just
being self-conscious about a gaping blouse, even when it’s underneath a JSK.
When your clothes fit you well, they are more flattering and make you feel more
beautiful as you are. Yes, it may cost you more if you have to get pieces
custom made – trust me, it will be worth it in the end!
3. Make Room for Experimenting
You may think you know what you love and what you’d feel
good in. However, experience has taught me that things that we often didn’t
imagine ourselves in, maybe even disliked, can be great for us. I thought I’d
never get into ouji and that I wouldn’t wear gothic, yet here I am. But your
experimenting can relate to anything, not just different styles. Try on a cut
you never envisioned yourself in. Play around with flatlays to put together
outfits outside of your comfort zone. Give that indie brand you’ve been eyeing
a try. Trying new things allows us to grow, as we learn from these experiences,
absorbing the good and reflecting on what didn’t work, and is how you will find
what works for your lolita wardrobe.
4. Allow Yourself to Grow and Change
Change is a natural part of life, even if it can cause us
some anxiety. It’s never been more obvious than now, with all these recent How
Hard Did Puberty Hit You and other Glow Up challenges floating around social
media. Look at your style when you were 10 or 15 years old. Would you dress
like this now? Most people wouldn’t. Was it the style you felt good in at that
time? For most people it was. I’ve gone through a phase of dressing quite
tomboyish: long cargo trousers, No Fear clothing and yearning to be ‘that rock
girl’ and not ‘that girly girl’ was my brand when I was around 14-15. I wouldn’t
dress like this now, but back then it was my fashion goal. Similarly, I’ve gone into lolita wanting all the cheesecake pin-up-esque Sweet in bright colours, whereas now I’m
all about those jewel tones, lean more classic than I do sweet and want simpler
pieces I can wear daily. As one of my friends once put it, if you could go back
in time you would still do the same thing because with the knowledge and
experiences you had back then that was the only decision you could’ve made at
that time. So even though it can be hard to let go of some things (and you don’t
have to do anything drastically), accept that you might’ve changed as a lolita
and that’s ok. Work with what you want your wardrobe to be now, not with what
you wanted it to be a year ago or when you first started.
5. Confidence is Key
This is a bit of a two-way street. When clothes fit us well
and we feel right in them, it gives us confidence. But we can also make clothes
feel better on us if we have confidence within us and let it shine. It’s a ‘fake
it ‘til you make it’ mentality. If you
love a piece and it makes you feel great, it shows and will come across to
people on the outside – rather than how much you dislike gaping blouse buttons
or having to put on a sports bra just to zip the dress up. So while I still
encourage getting pieces that fit you well, I am also guilty of keeping some
that don’t. And I combat that by allowing these gorgeous garments to make me
feel confident and by exuding that confidence to the outside world, so that
ultimately what the world sees is that this is my style, that I feel good in it
and that it works for me.
These are things that I try to stick to and that I have
discovered over the years. There’s not much more that you can do besides
actually trying things on and evaluating for yourself what works and what doesn’t.
At least even with the current oversaturation of the second hand sales market
you can still sell your clothes on, so if something doesn’t work out you are
not necessarily stuck with it.
How did you tailor your wardrobe to your needs? Any tips on
ensuring everything works for you and suits you well? These other bloggers taking
part in this week’s Lolita Blog Carnival prompt certainly have some, so make sure
to check them out:
All very good points! Comfort and focusing on things that I actually wear and don't just collect because they're pretty are areas I want to get better at i 2019.
ReplyDeleteIt's a long overdue goal for me. Not sure whether the lolita community overall feels that comfort is the new trend or whether it's fashion world at large (sportswear, sneakers and oversized things are having somewhat of a comeback from what I can see), but I appreciate it very much!
DeleteThese are great tips to keep in mind. I'm also guilty of hanging on to some things that don't fit me that well - I told myself I would only buy shirred pieces for comfort, but if I am in love with the design there's a 50/50 chance I'd get it anyway.
ReplyDeleteWe've had some newbies join our comm, and when they ask where they can possibly wear lolita, we always try to get them to ease into it and wear it as often as they can, even to get groceries or run errands. In my opinion, wearing it on regular days will help them feel more confident, if the coords are just like clothes and not fancy costumes.
I can't fit entirely unshirred pieces unless they're made to measure, so don't buy those. But partial shirring varies so much in fit and stretch depending on the overall cuthe piece, the elastic itself, the year it was released, the brand etc. So I have some that are a little bit tight and some that are comfortable. And the slightly tight ones are still too cute to let them go... ToT
DeleteThat is excellent advice. Many newcomers make their first piece something quite OTT or a highly coveted dream dress, which inevitably: a) end up being a bit much for casual wear; and b) are being set aside for a 'special occasion' (regardless of whether one is coming). Starting out with something simpler that can be worn daily, even in non-lolita ways, gets you used to standing out and the stares (which is what puts the majority of newbies off) and builds your confidence.