Dressing with Dignity and Style

 

 

 

Time was when the Parisian designers determined the fashion of the day and women like Jacqueline Kennedy and Babe Paley interpreted it in their own style.  Nowadays the young pop stars seem to set the fashion trends that women are supposed to follow.  If you are a young, edgy woman, you too can emulate the far out look of the pop princesses.  Go girl!

 

But what if you are a woman of a certain age – no longer young but too alive to be considered old?  What can you wear to proclaim to the world that you are still in the game?  How can you be stylish and up to date but still be appropriately dressed for those Ladies who Lunch events and dinners at the country club?  And most importantly, how can you do this within some kind of a reasonable budget?

 

Here are a few of the secrets I have learned during the many years in which I have been successful in achieving these goals.

 

 

Shop a Lot

 

First of all, I haunt the stores every minute I can squeeze out of my very busy life.  I go to a variety of stores, high end and medium priced to see what’s on the racks and I pay very close attention to those beautiful racks that feature that magic word SALE!

 

I have gotten some of my favorite items from the sale racks paying the same amount for good clothes that I would pay for ordinary things.  High end stores and boutiques must put the clothes that have not sold on sale at the end of each season to make room for the new items that are coming in.  Look closely, even if the racks are picked over or disorganized.  Your perseverance will pay off, trust me.    

 

Also, make sure you are on the mailing lists of every department store or boutique that carries clothes that interest you.  That way, you will be the first to know of trunk shows as well as have knowledge of impending sales, which will enable you to get a jump on your sale rack competitors.

 

 

Accessorize like crazy

 

Unless you have all your clothes custom made, there will be other women on this planet who will have purchased the same items that you have selected.  You want to look stylish but also individualistic?  The secret is in the accessories!  Buy accessories – lots of them. 

 

I never pass a shoe store or shoe department, without taking a serious look at the current trends in heel heights and slant, color and fabric.  Even an outfit from this season will look dated if your shoes are not in fashion, but an outfit from a season or two or even three years ago, will look brand new when worn with the latest shoes. 

 

Imelda Marcos was laughed at by some for the tremendous number of shoes she had in her closet, but frankly, every fashionable woman empathized with her for owning lots of shoes.  I, too, own a great number of shoes; maybe not as many as she had but quite a few nevertheless.  And let’s face it, even though high fashion shoes are expensive, they are an inexpensive way to update a good, but much worn, suit or dress. 

 

I also have a large selection of silk flower pins, interesting jewelry both real and costume, scarves, fur pieces and purses.  To make an outfit look cutting edge, I change the accessories to fit the current look.  To make a daytime suit or dress glamorous enough for evening, again, I change the accessories.  Works like magic!

 

 

 

Buy Quality

 

Good stuff looks good for years but bad stuff looks bad immediately!  When you are considering a purchase, feel the fabric, check the fiber content, examine the workmanship of the zipper, seams and hemlines.  If the item has a pattern, examine the match.  Nothing proclaims poor quality better than to have the pattern poorly matched at the seams.

 

Five years ago, I bought a jacket.  Unfortunately, when I spotted it, it wasn’t on the sale rack.  However, it fit me as if I had been the model it had been made for, plus, it was a tailoring ‘work of art.’  I really wanted this jacket but paying the full price was something I didn’t want to do unless I had to. I bought the jacket but held it, tags on and unworn, hoping that it would go on sale. 

 

Every week or so, I checked the store to see if it was on sale.  After about a month, the clerk told me that this item was not going to go on sale because every piece that the store had purchased had been sold at full price.  Decision time had approached for me.  After much deliberation and soul searching, I decided to keep the jacket, paying a rather hefty amount for it.

 

In the five years that I have owned this jacket, however, I have not only worn it numerous times, but I have also looked absolutely fabulous and stylish in it every time I’ve worn it. What is the secret?  Quality!  Quality of fabric, design and workmanship have made this jacket a very important staple in my wardrobe.  

 

 

Learn to Sew or Find a Good Dressmaker

 

When I was younger and had more time than money, I made quite a few of my own clothes.  Now that I have less time but more money, I often employ the use of a dressmaker. 

 

Last year I purchased a beautiful jacket in a style and fabric that I just loved and which was very flattering to me.  However, the skirt that had been designed to be worn with it had been made in a rather heavy gold leather fabric in an A-line shape.  It was also rather short, being a couple of inches above my knees.   Even though I am 5’ 8” and reasonably slender, the skirt made me look short and fat – not the look I wanted for myself.

 

I bought the jacket, however, knowing that my dressmaker could find fabrics for skirts that would work with this jacket and that she could make them in a style that would flatter my figure.  Since the jacket was of investment grade quality, I knew that I would want to wear it often and for quite a few years so I opted to have two skirts made for it. 

 

One skirt was made in a gold Shantung silk for those occasions when I wanted to dress up and wear an evening shoe with the outfit.  The other skirt was made in a mustard yellow cashmere that picked up that color in the tweed fabric of the jacket.  With this skirt, I could wear either a taupe colored fashion boot or a suede daytime heel. 

 

Neither skirt material was thick, so the fabrics did not add any extra bulk to my womanly hips.  Thank God!  To further slenderize my figure, I also had the dressmaker make the skirts in a mid-calf length and peg each of them. 

 

Voila!  Two skirts, two very different looks both with one great jacket.  Again, by adding different scarves, jewelry and fur pieces, I have managed to completely individualize both of these outfits.

 

 

Alterations, please

 

Unless you are the model for a certain size of a certain designer, chances are that the ‘off the rack’ items you purchase do not fit you perfectly.  What to do?  Do what men have always done when they buy a suit – have alterations!

 

Most good department stores and boutiques employ women who can do the alterations for you when you buy an item from the store.  These alterations are not included in the price and can be costly, but the advantage of using the store’s personnel for the alteration is that the store will stand behind the workmanship. 

 

But what if you have gained or lost weight and a favorite item in your wardrobe no longer fits?  Your dressmaker may be willing to do the alterations for you but if she is too busy, check the yellow pages for a tailor near you.  Also, check with your local dry cleaners.  There may be someone on staff who can do alterations.  I have an excellent alteration woman who also happens to be the owner of the dry cleaners I frequent.  

 

 

Don’t Throw Out – Store and Recycle

 

Most wardrobe advisors will tell you to get rid of items in your closet that you haven’t worn in the past two or three years.  Nonsense!  If you are temporarily tired of something or suspect that your friends are because you have worn and worn and worn an outfit, take it out of your main closet but don’t get rid of it.  Tuck it away somewhere for a future day when it will look new and fresh again. 

 

Where, you say?  If you have a home with a basement, buy some of those portable closets and store your out of favor clothes in them.  Better yet, have a cedar closet built in your basement so you can safely store your clothes plus your furs and fur pieces.  Not having to pay for fur storage every year will also have the advantage of saving you a few bucks.

 

You don’t have a basement?  Well, do you have a bed?  You can buy ‘under the bed’ storage units for those clothes that you are not ready to part with.  Put a few cedar squares inside the units and your clothes will be completely protected as well as out of your way.

 

Another advantage of keeping your favorite clothes even if you don’t want to wear them this season is that it will remind you of how your figure looked when you did wear them.  So many women, myself included, have a tendency to gain weight.  When I want to wear a dress or suit that I wore a few years ago but can’t because it is too tight, I have a great incentive to get back into my former shape.  What I do is hang the item in the doorway of my spare bedroom where I have to pass it every morning.  I then set a date when I want to wear the outfit.  Most of the time I am successful in sticking to my diet so I can achieve my goal of fitting into my dress, suit or gown by the time I want to wear it.

  

 

Stop Wearing Black

 

Wearing black all the time and for all occasions started as a rebellious, “I don’t care how I look because I have more important things on my mind,” fashion statement among the young art students of Paris.  Amazingly, what started as a fashion rebellion swept across Europe, crossed the Atlantic and conquered much of the United States, especially New York, becoming the fashion of the day.

 

Please!  Nowadays, when I go to an event, even a wedding, I feel like I am at a funeral because there are so many women wearing black.  Doesn’t anybody remember the ‘Color Me Beautiful’ concept of the 80’s?  Was that only a fad whose time has come and gone?  It shouldn’t be because it is a fact that the right colors can both flatter and slenderize a woman.

 

But, black is the most slenderizing color, you say.  Yes, this is true; this is the reason why I have so many black skirts and slacks.  However, I never wear black too close to my face because it can drain it of all color and make me look older.  Heaven forbid! 

 

If you never had an expert help you determine the colors that are the most flattering for you, find yourself an expert.  There are thousands of image consultants world wide and most of them live in our country.  Log onto the AICI’s (Association of Image Consultants International) web site, www.AICI.org for the name, address and phone number of an expert near you.  Keep your black outfits for funerals but don’t forget to put a colorful scarf at your throat.

 

 

Throw Away Your Blue Jeans!

 

I can’t stand seeing a mature woman walking around a department store or having lunch with her girlfriends wearing blue jeans!  Who is trying to look like – her teenaged daughter?  It doesn’t work, the blue jeans only make her look ridiculous. 

 

OK, don’t throw them out, but at least wear them only when they’re appropriate like when you’re hunting caribou in Alaska or chopping wood on the back forty.  For all other occasions, look like you’re proud to be a woman who has her own style, one that is appropriate for her age and position in the world.

 

I’m old enough to remember when young girls couldn’t wait to be grown up enough to wear the beautiful, elegant clothes that their mothers wore.  What happened to those days?  In our excessively youth oriented culture, the tables have been turned completely upside down.  We can’t look like our daughters and we shouldn’t want to.  Let them look like us for a change.  It would be a relief to see young women wearing something nicer than blue jeans in the high schools and on our college campuses!

 

 

 

Final Word

 

There, now you have it, my secrets.  Go forth into the world, my friend, dressing with dignity and style.  We’ve reached the age when we’ve earned the right to do so and we should do it with pride!

 

 

 Ms. Ruth Kern is an International Image and Etiquette Consultant. 

She has an extensive and informative web page, www.ModernEtiquette.com

 

Copyright 2002, All Rights Reserved

 

For permission to print this article in your magazine or newspaper and to receive photos to accompany the article please contact:

 

Ruth L. Kern

International Etiquette Consultant

(847) 382-9502

(847) 382-5889 fax

P.O. Box 3021

Barrington, IL  60011-3021