1. Fit is the quietest form of luxury.
I used to believe that luxury was about the label. I was wrong. The most expensive coat in the world, if it pulls across the shoulders or drags at the hem, will feel like a borrowed costume. The cheapest vintage blouse, if it follows the line of your body with ease, will feel like it was made for you. From my design training, I know that a garment is only as good as its relationship to the body wearing it. A good tailor is not an expense. A good tailor is the closest thing to magic that the fashion world actually offers.
2. Cost-per-wear will save you from almost every shopping mistake.
I learned this concept inside the industry but didn’t truly understand it until I left. Cost-per-wear is simple: divide the price by the number of times you will actually wear it. That designer gown I bought for a gala I attended once? Astronomical cost-per-wear. The cashmere crewneck I’ve worn weekly for three winters? Nearly free by now. When I started applying this math honestly — not aspirationally, but honestly — my purchases shrank in number and grew in meaning.
3. Trend fatigue is real, and you are allowed to opt out.
Inside Vogue, I breathed trends. They were the oxygen of editorial meetings, the rhythm of the fashion calendar. But outside, I discovered that no woman has ever felt truly at home in a closet that changes every six months. You do not need to participate in every micro-trend to be stylish. In fact, the most stylish women I’ve ever known — editors with forty years in the industry — wore variations of the same silhouette for decades. They weren’t boring. They were free.
4. You cannot shop your way out of a difficult emotion.
I own a silk dress I bought two days after a painful breakup. I wore it once, felt nothing, and never touched it again. The dress was beautiful, but it was trying to do a job that no garment can do. I know now that when I feel the urge to buy — when I am lonely, anxious, exhausted, unseen — what I often need is not a new thing. It is a walk. A conversation. A glass of water and a quiet evening. Clothes can hold meaning, but they cannot hold grief. Let them be clothes, not emotional shortcuts.

5. A small wardrobe that truly fits your life is more luxurious than a large one that doesn’t.
This is the lesson that took me the longest to learn. I once owned so many clothes that I would discover pieces I had forgotten existed. Now, my wardrobe fits comfortably in one closet, and every single item in it has been worn within the past year. That is not a restriction. That is a relief. My husband tells me that life is like tending flowers: it needs watering every day. A wardrobe is the same. You cannot tend what you do not see. You cannot love what you never reach for.
I share these five things not as rules, but as a quiet offering — the kind I wish someone had placed in my hands a decade ago. Fashion taught me how to see clothes. Life taught me how to feel them. And the feeling, I’ve finally learned, matters more.
Dress for the life you are gently returning to.