Cardigan Empire

Salt Lake City Fashion Stylist

  • ABOUT
    • Credentials
    • Press
    • Testimonials
  • SERVICES
    • Color Analysis
    • Fashion Lookbook
    • Local Services
    • Closet Cleaning
  • FIT GUIDES
    • Top Jeans
    • Modest Shorts
    • Leggings Comparison
    • Find Perfectly Fitting Clothes
    • Best Swimsuits for Your Bottom
    • Best Swimsuits for your Belly
    • Best Swimsuit for Your Bust

Search Results for: Soft summer

How to Make your Kids Clothes Last Longer

Your assistance in our Coco petition, garners ample appreciation. something wondrous like:
5 Steps to Extending the Life of Clothe-lettes

Proceed with me to your retributed reward…



Step I) Buy High Caliber Clothes
You may erroneously assume that investing in dandies for your dickens is equivalent to stocking your wipey case with George’s minted profile.  But you are wrong (hence erroneous).  And I will methodically address each of your arguments.  

  1. Small people grow big too quickly 
    Better clothes include self-adjusting details. Multiple button homes on elastic waistbands or shoulder straps allow clothing to be purchased roomy and worn from season dawn to season set, if not the next season go-round as well.
  2. Minors major in clothing destruction  Better clothes are made of better fabrics.  Tighter weaves proffer stain resistance, larger seam allowances protect against dropped hems, scientifically smartish blends stretch then rebound.  Give the fabric a tug, without compromising comfort you want a taut response.  A dense weave locks out potential stains.  Check the garment’s innards, the seam allowances should be generous and reinforced.  Hems should never look malnourished.  Inventory the tag, if it’s intended to stretch (ie a pull-on t-shirt) it should include a touch of spandex or lycra or similar.  Plain cotton will stretch, but it won’t rebound, and Flashdance fashion should never be forced on juveniles.
  3. Better clothes cost too much.  Quality is not measured in the number of digits on it’s retail tag.  Buy the best quality you can afford at the lowest price you can find.  Filter through end of season clearance racks at the stores you wish you could shop at…and you probably can. Buy for next season, then catalog it away until it is time to wear.  Check thrift and second hand shops, if they made it for a second go round, it may last longer than brand new disposable clothing.  Always, always, consider cost per wear

Step II) Dress for the Occasion
My babies dine in diapers.  Their petal soft skin is far easier to polish clean than their clothes are.  While this technique may not be appropriate for your ten-year-old, prepare ensembles for activities with clothing pollution potential.  Make smocks, aprons, or pre-stained items available for painting, grass rolling, cooking, etc.



Step III) Refashion Outgrowths
Cut back on giant arm syndrome by rolling the sleeves.  Layer a thin cotton underneath. Make what you already have work.  Winter’s wool trouser may blossom into wee tween short pants.  A-line dresses make natural tunics and what was originally donned as this year’s denim skinnies may evolve into summer capris and can even be selected for boot tucking next winter.  Evaluate how you can refashion what you already have before you buy your next season of inventory.  






Step IV) Cross-Dress
This button-up was intended for Baby Boyfriend’s fall collection, but while we waited for him to sprout a few lb’s and “‘s, sister enjoyed it for a few summer frolics.  If there’s little chance of it wearing out, buy it in a gender neutral color.  White onesies and socks know no gender boundary.


Step V) Wash Less, Quickly
If you want to obliterate the Winnie-The-Pooh coveralls that Grandma gifted your darling, wash them.  Wash them every time you pass a dirty look at them, because washing is the fastest way to break fibers down.

Conversely, the fewer times you have to wash an item, the longer it will live.  Step two’s occasional dressing will aid your wash resistance and so will the liberal wielding of your wipey case. Wipeys aren’t just for diaper debris.  Those and their wet rag cousins can remove all kinds of unset stains.  Address baby spits, toddler dribbles, and the like as soon as they land.   



In short, if it isn’t stinky or soiled, put it back in the drawer.  If it is dirty, treat it as soon as possible.  If you don’t have a load to launder at hand, apply stain remover and a quick warm water soak to ensure the stain doesn’t set.  When you’re ready to wash,  use a quality detergent to support clothing longevity.  If your detergent is efficacious in one wash, you’ve saved yourself at least another wear.



And I’m not done thanking you, next post I’ll address how to dress your tween.

In the meantime, book a Virtual shopping session for you, for your progeny, for your next family frolic.  I was born to fashion childhood and the supporters of it.


Feed me fashionably fresh

posted Filed Under: Budget, Children's Fashion, Laundry Care

Beauty-Full Tuesday: Beth of Close to My Heart

Smart, kind, strong, beautiful,
meet Beth who is already Close to My Heart.
Being an artist, and a highly visual person, seeing something I find beautiful deeply touches my soul and leaves an imprint on my mind.

And I like to think that I have a gift for finding uncommon beauty.  Seeing it where it is hidden or masked or dulled, seeing the potential for beauty or beauty outside the traditional definition. I like to think that I am pretty good at that … pretty good except when it comes to seeing it in myself.

For years and at a young age, I struggled with an eating disorder. Struggled so severely that at times I wanted my life to end. I loathed myself from the inside out. I saw nothing beautiful in my person and felt nothing of worth. At times I thought I would never feel whole again. Years ago I decided I had had enough. I was done living this way. I knew there was good to be had in life and I wanted some. I mustered up all the courage I could muster and paid to see a therapist who specialized in eating disorders. I learned to trust in the Lord. I read and studied and prayed from books of earthly and spiritual wisdom. I began to let go of things and feelings from my past. And I began to heal.
I remember that summer of healing. I remember it so clearly. I looked at myself in the mirror and for the first time in probably a decade, I saw myself and thought “I am beautiful.” Just a little bit beautiful, but beautiful nonetheless. I saw beauty in myself despite my imperfections. Those “flaws” were mine; they made me who I am. As the years have progressed I find this occurrence happening more frequently. I have grown fond of features I previously thought were ugly. I’ve learned to love my imperfect self.  Not perfectly, but I’ve journeyed a mighty emotional distance. 
I have 3 beautiful daughters and one beautiful son. It’s amazing that my body, a body I previously loathed, had the ability to create such perfection. Every day I look at them and I hope they know what they’re worth. I hope they fill their thoughts with how their simple service, innocence, mistakes, and persistence makes them beautiful.

The most beautiful things are imperfect, they have tarnish and wear, they have sacrificed much for someone or something they love. Beauty to me is not the perfect plastic mannequin but the soft, worn woman who tucks her children into bed at night with tenderness after an exhausting day.  Who trades high heels and accolades for dirty bare feet and the slobbery kisses of her children.

My heart aches for my old self, I want to soothe her and hold her, and tell her how wonderful she is. But I also know that she grew stronger from all of that and she will use that strength to help others.
I have my girls say this before they go to school in the morning:
“I am smart. I am kind. I am strong. I am beautiful.”
They are. So are you.
Feed me fashionably fresh

posted Filed Under: Beauty-Full Tuesday, Body Image

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • Next Page »

Categories

 

spacer
spacer
spacer advertise

Copyright © 2025 · Cardigan Empire on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in