He had that ‘Little Something’, that ‘je ne sais quoi,’ commonly considered the essence of Parisian Style. My husband and I considered what it was, like a flick of static, that made us aware of him. We concurred his neck scarf wrapped for warmth was the singular sartorial item of note. I asked my husband to take a photo.
Style found in a small café in Saint Germain-des-Pres would not be all that note-worthy save for the very stylish gentleman who was a tourist, perhaps French from another part of the country but not Parisian.
The man in the Paris café has remained the quintessential example of Style. And Style that was not solely dependent upon the clothes he wore.
When I think about style now, I do not think only about seasonal fashion shifts, hairstyles, or makeup choices. I think about Style in an overarching sense. That ‘little something’ is not just style alone but in conjunction with lifestyle. I went to the dictionary first, then to Google to see what the sages offered.
The dictionary:
Style, noun
When I checked again for Lifestyle, it provided:
When I searched Google for style and lifestyle, fashion and age, exercise and health were the predominant links that peppered the search.
The opportunities to become a woman with style came later in life.
I confess my inevitable failures have occasionally vexed me as I journeyed toward being a particular kind, form, and character. Being distinctive through action and presence was, I felt deep inside, important regardless of how inept I felt at times.
My first steps were awkward. I had intelligence, but I needed to gain my own opinion. I was visual but had yet to learn what I liked versus what I liked for me. Having more things was more important than having the better something. I didn’t know who I was and wanted to have multiple choices from which to pick. Inevitably, frumpy and predictable were adjectives I was all too familiar with.
I remember when I was in the Portland Patagonia store looking with my husband for something he wanted. I was feeling beige and boring. A woman walked by me; I felt a jolt of envy for her ease and grace, simplicity of dress, adorned with a good dose of ‘je ne sais quoi’.
I noticed her shopping style, looking and considering, not rushing. She did not look at the price tag until she pulled the item off the rack and thought it was worth consideration. I noticed how she spoke with her friend, a ready smile she shared easily. She was open and contained at the same time.
I remember the moment when the penny dropped.
It was as if my eyes were opened for the first time. I saw she was neatly and easily put together quality over quantity, having one adornment, a unique, statement-making wrist cuff. She took the classics and gave them a hard twist: simple, quality, and one eye-catching accessory. She was calm and laughed easily.
I had a recipe!
It took a long while for me to break my habits of overdoing, overspeaking, and wearing other people’s choices badly, but finally, I did.
As I age and better understand myself in the life given to me, my lifestyle and style have evolved, changed, or become a second skin. Being a person of conscience as well as a visual person, I perceive style as a way of being, not just looking.
I am not surprised by my desire to whittle down the props in my life, the concepts in my head, the attitudes in my behavior, and the clothing in my closet. Reframing my life, one decision at a time, brings me to the single suitcase concept.
I have this fantasy: if I were to have the White Shirt I have been looking for, my best-fitting pair of jeans, my favorite pants, the sweater that went from day to night, the jacket that aided that journey, along with the scarf that tied it all together along with the ankle boots I adore, I could travel on the spur of the moment with one suitcase. I would feel myself being myself at ease and with grace. I could be contained in my presentation and still be open of heart.
Further, my words would be less on a subject and more informative; my effort to sit up straight would pay off. I could make dinner from what I already have in the larder and be satisfied with what I am doing at this moment. The tapes in my head would be silent, and the silence would be soothing.
Further read, THE CAPSULE WARDROBE – A MUST HAVE EVERY WOMAN SHOULD BE UTILIZING.
Also read, CAPTIVATE HEARTS THIS VALENTINE’S DAY WITH EXQUISITE JEWELRY – EXCLUSIVELY AVAILABLE ON QVC!
What does style mean to you? Do you consider yourself stylish? How do you accomplish style? How do you tie fashion pieces together? Does it come to you naturally, or have you had to learn?
In New York City, there is always someone who has more money than you and is better dressed, or so they say. But scarves, hats and big hoop earrings can go a long way.
I think you caught the essence correctly. Style is both being and a look. It is learned thru travel, observation, and study.
I’m retired, I paint, I sometimes sell my work. I always been able to see style everywhere but not been able to transfer it to my own shoulders.
I believe lack of confidence, an inability to accept and like my womanly figure and work with it has prevented me from being truly stylish. The good part of being old is having a sense of urgency and the knowledge that I am fine as I am.
I’ve learned to work with what I have and stick to clothes that help me achieve “my” style. Earrings are my go to accessory, I’m known for my “dingle dangle” earrings as my stepdaughter told me.
Coco Chanel said, “take off one thing before you leave the house.”
Preferably not your underpants, I quietly reply.
I apologize, but I must beg to differ. You have great style. You know who you are, what you have, what needs working on, an art through which you express yourself, and a very good collection of quotations from which to put a period at the end of the sentence. Well done you.
My go to items are always nice printed scarves and unusual earrings and jewellery. I have pieces bought from gallery shops and also hand made silver pieces from art exhibitions I have been to over the years. I also collect reading glasses and have some very funky frames, my most recent were purchased in Denmark.
At 62 I’m not the small size 10 lady of yesteryear, now more a 14-16, but I try to dress well for my size and choose nice smart casual separates (I no longer have the lifestyle for suits or formal dresses). I like wearing makeup in natural colours and even if I am just going along the street to my local supermarket I will wear tinted moisturiser, eyebrow pencil, clear mascara for definition and lipstick. It makes me feel confident as I go about my grocery shopping. My hair is professionally coloured and styled every few weeks, going to the salon and being pampered is my big treat – along with my stylist being a young handsome Italian ;) !
Do different combinations of outfits and accessories affect how you feel, present, and interact with others? Being that we are, I believe, made of many parts, I find I dress to who I am/ how I am on a given day ( in addition to external necessities), which affirms a certain vein of personality that may not often be expressed. So wonder if others have a similar experience.