Monday 24 November 2014

Clothes creep

I'm almost 2/3 of my way through Oct-Dec Project 333. 

I'm loving the clothes I'm wearing - I'm definitely more of a cold-weather-clothes person. I think this may be because darker/warmer colours seem to suit me better than lighter/pastel colours - and generally there are more clothes in these colours at this time of year and these are generally for cooler weather.

However, I have to admit to clothes-creep.

It started well. I replaced a jumper with another from my standby wardrobe.  I replaced my jeans with some black and blue ones which fit much better and I feel better wearing.  But then I looked at my wardrobe and realised that I've not yet worn some of the clothes in there - one dress is slightly small and doesn't do me any favours, another I've not had the occasion to wear it. I've not worn 2/3 cardigans as they're not big enough to go over long-sleeved tops.   I know I need to do a mid-point wardrobe revision, but I've not quite managed it, I think this is for the following reasons:
- I included dresses in my wardrobe.  I'm not a dress person, but I feel I try to be (at least some of the time) because it will give me a bit of variety.  I've not yet worn the dresses in the original cut.  If I take them out, I'm admitting defeat.
- I really want to wear colours that suit me (autumn-type shades mainly) but am drawn to black because it's easy to wear, most things will go with it and it's easy to find in the shops (this last one is a biggie - try finding dark brown trousers (brown is not popular this year) in a fabric I like, a cut/fit that suits me and in my size - it's practically impossible.  Not even polyvore or shopstyle have been able to help me).  So I'm mainly wearing black, but don't want to get rid of the warmer colours from my wardrobe just yet (in the hope that I'll find that pair of trousers that ties everything together).

So, in the knowledge that I'm not wearing my full wardrobe (but without doing the sensible thing and having a wardrobe audit) I've bought myself a few more clothes that I should definitely wear:
- some pyjamas in deep red/brown (I know these don't count in the 333, but I've been amazed at how much better I've felt wearing a colour that I know suits me, even just to sleep!)
- a dress from a posh (for me) shop - it was in the sale, I had a money off voucher (old habits...), it's charcoal (so not completely black) and is wool so ideal for autumn/winter.  I've worn this twice, once for work, once for play - I really like it.  And it gives me chance to wear my long boots, that I love.
- the jeans I mentioned above.  I bought two pairs of black cotton jeans that I can get away with for work (smart-casual) and some blue jeans - high-ish waist, bootcut (not very fashionable, but refuse to wear skinny jeans as I'd look ridiculous).  I have worn no other trousers since I bought these.  No regrets there.
- some oxblood (deep red/burgundy/maroon) coloured ankle boots.  I love these, the colour, the style, they have a three-inch heel that I usually avoid but because it's a chunky heel I have no problem walking in them.  I've put away my battered old black ankle boots and not looked back.
- I've also just ordered two dress/tunics (they're not long enough for me to wear with leggings, so will be worn with trousers) in brown and teal.  They are in "my" colours, they could be worn for both work and play.  I'm looking forward to trying them.

Because of this, I have more than 33 items in my wardrobe.  I need to be realistic and move out the things that I'm not wearing.  But do I do it now?  Or wait until the end of December when I'll be revisiting my wardrobe for Jan-March?  I can sense a big clear out coming on (some of the clothes that have not made the cut and also not been re-assigned to pilates clothing or nightwear), but I'm not quite ready for it yet...

Tuesday 14 October 2014

Spoke too soon

I was feeling so smug that I had my wardrobe sorted.  Then I had an epiphany over some jeans I've been wearing for the last few weeks and decided they had to go.  They will be ebayed to make way for a new pair which is the same fit as ones I already have (no surprises) - I refuse to wear clothes that I know I look rubbish in (even if it takes me a while to work it out).

In other news, I drove past my nearest shopping outlet today. Without shopping.  The words "I don't NEED anything" popping into my head.  Am I cured??


Friday 3 October 2014

Round 2: Project 333 October-December

 At the beginning of September I started to daydream about my autumn-winter project 333 wardrobe.  I hadn't actually made a conscious decision to carry on, but it all seemed to come together so easily it seemed a shame not to.

So I looked at what I had (I have a much better autumn-winter wardrobe than spring-summer) and it seemed so easy.  I've kept a few items that didn't make the cut, either as potential substitutes or because I really like them and can't justify getting rid quite yet.  I've carried out a few items from the previous July-September wardrobe (long sleeved t-shirts, work shirts, jeans) and I think I'm there.



Knitwear (8)
I don't like to be cold, so have lots of knitwear.  Two big cosy jumpers in black and purple - love these for non-work or even work if it's really cold.  Three cardigans in purple, brown and black - for both work and play.  Three jumpers, again for in or out of work, in deep red, black and teal.

 


Work shirts (3)
I didn't wear my work shirts much during the summer, but it's good to have them in case I actually have to look the part and as an extra layer under a jumper...












Casual tops (5)
Realistically, these are the tops I'll be wearing most of the time (and two from the previous project 333 wardrobe).  I really like them now, but who knows how I'll feel by Christmas.




Dresses (2)
Yes, I know, I don't wear dresses.  But with leggings (not counted) and boots I'm going to risk it




Trousers (6)
I'm going for two pairs of denim jeans (one blue, one black), two pairs of cotton jeans (I didn't know you could get jeans in non-denim fabric and still call them jeans, but apparently you can) in black and brown, which can be worn for both work and home, and two pairs of strictly work trousers, in black and brown.




Non-coat jackets (3)
These are extra layers for when a cardigan just isn't enough.  Good for work over a shirt/jumper combination when it's cold but not cold enough for a big winter coat.  Good to just pull on as you leave the house or take with you just in case.  I seriously love these.  I've had one for nearly ten years...




Coats (2)
No picture as I've not dug them out yet, but a have a very warm brown knee-length coat by www.Braintreeclothing.co.uk that I bought at the Greenbelt festival a few years ago.  As well as this (and depending on what I'm wearing underneath) I have a black cape bought from M&S last year that I love.   Some people are saying that capes are the big thing this year, some people make jokes about batman.  But it is truly the warmest, easiest thing to wear that I have ever owned.

Footwear (4)
Again, no picture.  I have over-the-knee black boots which I love (they were part of my first wedding outfit and I've been saving them for "best" until project 333 made me realise that if I love them I should wear them) which I will wear with the dresses and made the longer tops if I'm feeling brave.  I have almost-knee-length brown boots which I normally live in.  A pair of shorter black boots for wearing with trousers (I don't subscribe to the idea of short boots with skirts, I would feel ridiculous) and some work shoes (probably black).

Which makes 33.  It seems like a lots of clothes.

I've stuck mainly to browns and blacks as base colours because black is easy and I like wearing it and brown suits me most.  But I've also tried to bring in colours that suit me and go with most others, so hopefully it won't be a complete disaster.  

I'm bending the rules slightly as I've decided not to include leggings and vests as in the winter they are basically underwear.  I'm not including jewellery as I don't wear much in winter and if I do it will be a special occasion.  I have also not included hats, gloves and scarves, because it's winter.  I definitely have more clothes than I did in summer, but have justified that as it's colder and I'll need more layers...

So here we go again.



Project 333 July-September: the conclusions

So I've completed Project 333 in the summer - 3 months with only 33 items of clothing/footwear.  It was actually fine.  I learnt a lot.

  1. I learnt which clothes I actually didn't like/feel good in (you'd have thought that I'd have been able to figure that out on my own, wouldn't you) and I subsequently got rid of those clothes.
  2. I learnt that while doing project 333, it makes it very tricky to have more than two "basic" colours - for example, I had black, brown and navy but these weren't easy to combine and I ended up with a couple of items of clothing that could only be worn in one outfit - which is not great when you're trying to be minimalist.  And the main selling point of project 333 (to me) is that theoretically most things in your wardrobe can be worn together (taking the hassle out of deciding what to wear in the mornings). So that's been taken forward to next time.
  3. I was reminded that clothes actually wear out.  I feel really stupid saying this, but I suppose I've bought clothes with such regularity (or to be fair, my size has fluctuated) so I've not had nearly as much wear out of clothes as I should have.  In fact I can tell you the last time an item of clothing wore out for me - it was a pair of linen/cotton maternity trousers that I worn non-stop through 1.5 pregnancies.  They literally fell apart so I could never again.  It was really disappointing as they were great trousers, but I certainly got my moneysworth out of them.
  4. I learnt that fashion is a pain.  In my head I know roughly what colours and shapes suit me.  I look for v-neck or scoop neck tops - but high neck/slash neckline/round neck are the main styles in the shops.  I like bootcut/wideleg trousers (apparently currently the height of unfashion) but the shops are full of skinny jeans/cigarette trousers(??)/ jeggings - all of which make my legs look like parsnips.  I like brown - I needed to replace my brown cardigan - but could find nothing.  A search for brown brought up items in wishy washy taupe, or beige or camel, not chocolate brown.  Brown is obviously not in fashion.  (I eventually found one, but only by going to a specialist cardigan website that fashion had missed).  It is usually eventually possible to find what you're looking for, but it takes ages and many frustrating hours searching the web.
  5. I learnt that I'm a creature of habit.  On a slow day this week I thought about my hypothetical project 333 wardrobe for spring-summer next year - lots of things in the wardrobe are very similar to those in this time.  I will properly segregate "holiday clothes" as shorts and sandals were really only worn for 1-2 weeks, I will replace a few items (the navy coloured clothes, for example) and will probably treat myself to 1-2 new things (if they suit me...) that turn up in the shops next year, but other than that, I like what I have.  *I have actually bought some summer shoes in the sales this week, as I really felt that I didn't have any "nice" shoes to wear outside work - I'm just sorry I'll have to wait another 6+ months to wear them*
  6. I have found it liberating to get rid of a load of clothes.  I didn't think I would, but I did.  It is joked that I have my own collection at the local charity shop.
  7. I've learnt that although I occasionally need smart clothes for work, it's not that often.  It's a bit annoying having to include smart work clothes into the wardrobe when they only worn a handful of times, but I guess if my projects changed their could be a greater need in future.
  8. There are still some clothes I can't part with.  These are often dresses and skirts.  I'm not a dresses/skirt person, although I've worn both in the past.  I also have a number of posh-ish dresses that I need to keep hold of as my company has black-tie events twice a year and it's bad form to turn up in the same outfit twice (if you're female, obviously.  It's compulsory to wear the same outfit again and again if you're male...)  But back to the dresses and skirts.  I think I'm hanging onto them as they are definitely dresses/skirts I would wear if I were to wear dresses/skirts.  So they sit behind the wardrobe door that I seldom open - now that I can view my entire project 333 wardrobe by opening one door...
  9. I learnt that I want to do it all again.

Friday 29 August 2014

Looking forward

So I'm almost in the final month. 
The weather has temporarily taken a turn for the worst (although we're promised it's going to be back in the 20Cs next week).  I have piles of laundry as my toddler is going through a bed-wetting phase, so it's new bedding most days and the general laundry is getting neglected.  I have run out of clean, casual long-sleeved tops and today was not short-sleeves weather.  So today I wore an item I have ear-marked for Oct-Dec project 333.   I'm not sure about it.  In some ways I love it (colours, style) in others I"m not sure (is it too casual, do I look like I'm wearing a sack?).

I'm becoming much more discerning about what I wear now, as if I'm going to wear an item as a wardrobe staple for 3 months, I've got to love wearing it and feel great in it. 

I have a confession.  There are four items of my Project 333 wardrobe I've not worn or only worn once.  I find this unbelievable.  These items are:
  • a pair of black trousers.  I feel that I need a pair.  I wore these all the time prior to 333, but have seriously gone off them and never wear them.  I think it's because feeling good is important to me and, although I didn't realise this when wearing them before, these just don't do it for me.
  • a black shirt.  This would be something I wore for work but I've not worn it for two reasons - 1. It's a little bit tight on me. 2. My workplace is fairly casual/smart-casual, so I don't really need it.
  • a white shirt.  I've worn this once, for an initial business meeting with a prospective client.   It's another victim of the dress-code in my office.
  • my camel-coloured rain coat.  To be fair, I don't feel that the weather has necessitated it.  Maybe once September kicks in...
  • now the weather is slightly cooler, I've also stopped wearing my light-weight patterned trousers.  This makes me sad, but it's so much harder to layer up with trousers.
I'm trying to use this to feed into the selection of Oct-Dec project 333 wardrobe, however the only way I've done this so far is to go shopping.  For the first time in 2 months!  In the sale, obviously.
  • I've ordered some new black trousers, to replace the existing unworn pair.  These look nice on the website, but if they don't fit right/make me feel great, they're going straight back.
  • I've mentioned previously that I have two patterned tops in the current wardrobe that I'm not sure about and don't feel that they suit me, so in the same order I've sent for two plain tops to replace them.  These are short-sleeved and, if they fit/make me feel fabulous, I'm going to replace them in my current wardrobe straight away.  I'm not sure if it's wise to replace in the final month, but I'm hoping (kidding myself??) that I'm building an overall wardrobe that will meet my needs for all the seasons.  I'm also struggling to find short-sleeved, summer tops in deeper colours, so grabbing them when I do find them.
When buying I felt much calmer than in the past.  There was no excited euphoric feeling on placing the order.  The items were in my virtual basket for over a week, until I was sure I was doing the right thing.  This was a good feeling.

Saturday 16 August 2014

Half-way through

As I calculate it, July-September is 92 days, so I've just passed the half-way point.  I thought I'd draw together my thoughts so far.

Overall - I love doing this.  I probably did it before to some extent without realising it, but feel so much more in control of things having a smaller wardrobe with limited options.  It takes out any what-to-wear stress in the morning and as long as I keep on top of the laundry I know I should be fine for pretty much any occasion.

I'm learning about my sense of style (or lack of it!).  There are a number of items in my 333 wardrobe that I don't think suit me, that are limited in what I can wear them with and which will definitely not make it into any future project 333 wardrobes:
  • My navy linen trousers and navy sleeveless top that I wear for work.  Navy doesn't really go with any other top/trousers combination in my wardrobe.  I'm not sure it's a great colour for me (much as I love them, blues are not good or "warm" enough).  The navy top is definitely going as soon as the clock strikes midnight on Sept 30th, I'm going to hang on to my linen trousers until I find a suitable replacement in black/brown.
  • Patterned tops - I have a couple of patterned tops, in my colours, so red/cream and brown/cream.  They should work.  But I don't feel that they do.  I think it's the style and the fit, but I don't feel good in them.  I'm definitely going to stick to (mainly) plain tops in the future - or at least patterns that I'm comfortable in (stripes have continued to be a favourite, for example).  Life is too short to hate my clothes.
  • Shorts.  I don't really wear shorts, I've worn them on holiday and perhaps 1-2 times otherwise.  I'm considering relegating them to the extra items for a holiday wardrobe.
  • I'm not going to bin or replace these items now for a couple of reasons.  Firstly because when it comes to Spring/Summer I might be a different size, new fashions may have emerged that I really like, so I don't see much point in buying now for 9 months time.  Secondly because I'm realising that I need specific items, I want to be sure that these items are right for me, I want to feel good wearing them.  I don't want to buy on impulse.  So I'm going to bide my time, keep an eye on what is out there and only buy when I'm sure.  Hopefully in the next 9 months (before the next 333 summer wardrobe is needed) I should have found suitable clothes.

Quality is an issue for me.  Some of the clothes I really like in this wardrobe are very thin and consequentially are quite worn, after continuous use over the past 6-7 weeks.  These items were from the cheap end of the spectrum, I'm not sure if that's the issue or if it's just because they're lighter, thinner summer clothes.  Now my wardrobe is smaller and I'm buying less, I'm starting to think much more carefully about what I buy.  In my head I have a list of colours that are right for me.  I have a list of styles that I think I could probably pull off.  I have a list of clothes I need/gaps in my wardrobe. 

My shopping is now starting in the ethical/fairtrade clothing ranges - places like People Tree, Braintree hemp, Komodo, Namaste.  In the past I've found these clothes to be good quality, wear well and you have some kind of reassurance that they're not being manufactured in sweatshops.   The trouble is, if you're restricting yourself in terms of what suits you, when there are a limited number of suppliers you may not get what you want, in the style you want, in the colour you want, in the size you want.  But I figured it's a good starting point.

I'm still excited about Project 333, I'm putting together my autumn/winter wardrobe already and I'm attempting to be more minimalist around the home also (this may not be immediately apparent to anyone else, but I am...).  As long as I'm not expected to minimalise my number of handbags...

Saturday 26 July 2014

Reflections so far

So, I'm back from my holidays.  The weather was lovely, warm and mostly dry, so in the end I didn't wear some of my "back up" pieces, I went to a launderette and did some washing towards the end of the break (and the added bonus was that there was less laundry to do when I got home). 

It was interesting, some of the things I took with me really didn't work, so they've gone to the charity shop (I'm starting my own collection there...), other things which I've kept in reserve reserve position I've now decided I'm not going to wear again (wrong colour, fit, etc) so they've either been transferred to the "gym clothes" pile or again, off to the charity shop.

I've also had a good look at my wardrobe and I think I've made some rookie errors, especially with trousers.  I have two pairs of summer trousers that I love, one brown/cream, one red/pink and black.  I'm wearing one pair now, they are perfect for weather like this, hot and clammy UK summers.  As work is smart-casual/casual (depending on the office I'm in) I can make these work all week.  However, there are only a limited number of things I can wear them with.  The brown trousers - I have a brown work top, another top which is not suitable even for the casual days at work and that's about it.  Other tops don't go or it would be a case of pattern overload.  So realistically, that's one item, only one outfit.  The red/pink and black ones are slightly better, but only because I have three different, un-patterned black tops (vest, short-sleeved, long-sleeved) I can wear with them.

So, although I'm going to persevere for now, I'm going to keep that in mind going forward.

Speaking of going forward, I'm been thinking of the next stage - that is, October-December Project 333.  I still have a wardrobe full of clothes (I have no room to put the non-project 333 clothes out of sight, they're just in the other side of the wardrobe being ignored), so I thought that one way of whittling them down would be to give some thought to what I'm going to wear as we move into autumn-winter.  This can obviously change, but I'm made a start.  This time, so far, I have plain trousers (see above) and a few tops/tunics/dresses with accents of a number of colours, so it should be easier to mix and match.  At the moment I'm not including hats/scarves/gloves, or vest tops that will be worn for warmth only, plus I'm going to have bonus items of a warm cardigan (we have friends who have no heating, so I like to be prepared) and a Christmas jumper that will only be worn for a couple of weeks in December.  To be honest, as this next wardrobe is much more versatile, my options seem huge and I might cut it down further, either before or during.

But, a lot can change in (over) two months, so I'm going to focus on the current wardrobe for now.  Patterned trousers and all.

Saturday 12 July 2014

Day three of cheating

So, this is the third day of my holiday.  So far I've worn two of my "cheat tops" (those that were not in the original 33 and are designated "holiday only") and I've had a revelation.

I don't like wearing them.  I don't think they suit me, I don't feel good wearing them.  I find it odd that after only a week of doing 333, where I originally found it so tricky to select what was going in the minimalist wardrobe I can have such a strong reaction to a couple of pieces I've left out.  But maybe it's because I like the clothes I've selected so much that it's a reaction against all the things I kept because I thought I should like/wear them, they were the right colours, etc.

Whatever it is, these tops are going straight in the charity bag when I get back.

Wednesday 9 July 2014

They're coming to get you...

I am a marketer's dream.  In the past, if I see there's something new out there, I want to buy it and try it.  I love online shopping and it seems that every time I buy something, the shop puts me on their mailing list.  So at least once a day I get an email telling me about the latest offer, latest sale, spend £30 get £5 off, free delivery today only, extra 20% off selected sale items.

Today was the final straw:
"R - you need new clothes" was the subject heading.
And yes, it worked.  I opened the email.  I really don't need those clothes.  Then it made me cross.  I'm as in charge of my own behaviour as anyone else, but the blatant hard-sell, implying my current clothes weren't good enough, was a step too far.

So I'm going to (attempt to) remove myself from mailing lists.  I don't want to be tested all the time, tempted by the latest "bargain".  I have enough clothes.  If I need something specific I'll research it and buy that one thing (ideally good quality, ethically sourced - if I can find something in my size/colour that I like) rather than buying cheap rubbish because an email tells me I need to.

Sunday 6 July 2014

Holiday cheating

I know I've been doing this less than a week, but I need to schedule some cheating.  I've checked the rules, and I'm allowed.  The problem is that I'm going on holiday for 10 days (hooray!) but won't have access to a washing machine (boo).

When on holiday I really don't want to be driving around trying to find a launderette.  I also know that, while I don't mind wearing the same pair of trousers a few days in a row, I'll want a clean top each day.  This is because:
a - I'll be in the south of England, so the weather could be sunny, warm etc as it has been generally for the past few weeks (so potential to get hot and sweaty)
b - or it could be torrential rain (so I'll get soaked through) 
c - I'm planning on trips to the beach where everything (usually) gets full of sand
d - I'll be with a small boy who frequently ends up wearing his food (and therefore, often, so do I)

So, my wardrobe has 5-6 tunics/tops that are suitable for non-work activities.  That leaves me with needing 4-5 days-worth of tops.  I've chosen these:
It's not a great view, but I have:
- a beige linen dress - I don't wear dresses often (hence it's not in the 33) but I like this one enough to take on holiday as an extra
- a striped beige/green tunic - I love this top so much, but it's not in the 33 for two reasons.  1 - I'm not sure stripes do me any favours.  2 - it's actually a maternity top.  I'm not pregnant and couldn't justify choosing a maternity top as one of my 33, but I'm looking forward to wearing it (once) next week
- a brown t-shirt/tunic.  I like this a lot, but there were limited things it would go with in my capsule wardrobe, so I left it out
- a beige t-shirt.  I'm actually not sure if this is going to make it to the end of the season without being sent to the charity shop.  I like the thought of it, but I'm not sure it suits me.  This is make-or-break for this t-shirt...
- a long striped vest.  I'm not convinced stripes look great on me, but I'm on holiday, so don't care (albeit briefly)

In a strange way, I'm not sure I'm comfortable with wearing clothes outside of the 333 capsule wardrobe.  I think I'm worried that I'll like it too much and give up, or I'll not actually wear many of the extras (despite having the opportunity) and then I'll have no reason to save them from the charity shop.  I'm feeling merciless - I've sent two bin bags-worth of clothes to the charity shop this weekend.  There's at least one more bag of potentials, but because they don't quite fit, I'm delaying the decision and putting them in the "decide later" pile.  But when it's clothes that I have worn and loved, it's a bit more tricky...


Thursday 3 July 2014

First proper challenge: laundry

So, my first proper challenge on Project 333 (if you don't count changing items on day one, which I don't) is laundry.
Even though I live in a house with two other people, one of them small and messy, we seem to be on top of the laundry so far this week, no overflow of laundry basket, no small boy having run out of summer shorts and t-shirts.  The laundry basket is half full.

We're going away for the weekend tomorrow and I've done some packing, an outfit for tomorrow evening and warm/cold options for Saturday and Sunday as you can never tell what the weather is going to do.  I then looked at what to wear today and I'm struggling for options - maybe the pair of jeans I've not packed (too warm)?  The black and white striped tunic (it's a short-sleeves kind of day)?

My entire wardrobe (that isn't packed) seems to be in the laundry pile.

I think it's because I've had a work-casual week, I've not worn smart-casual/smart clothes to work, so they're still in the wardrobe, being completely inappropriate for another working-from-home-to-get-this-report-written day.

Fortunately (not really, but...) said small boy wet the bed last night, so at least one laundry wash is going on.  So my wardrobe should be restored.  And I have resorted to not-leaving-the-house "in-house loungewear", at least until I go out at 6pm.  When it should be cooler enough to wear jeans.

Tuesday 1 July 2014

The Men Who Made Us Spend

Just watching this on the ways we're persuaded to spend money on stuff we don't need.  I'm as guilty as anyone for wanting nice stuff (although I'm always trying to get the best deal on it). 

It's looking mainly at technology, but fashion is similar - it's so disposable, especially in the time of cheap fashion (Primarni and co).  The pressure to wear the right kind of jeans, for example.  A few years ago it was all about bootcut jeans (which I liked) and/or low-rise style.  Then it was all about skinny jeans (that make those of us with wider legs look like parsnips wrapped in denim).  Personally I'd rather wear what suits me, but once something is out of fashion it's much more difficult to get hold of (and some will ridicule you for wearing "nanna jeans"). So it's easy to fall into the fashion trap.

In the past, I've done my holiday clothes shopping in Primark, worn the clothes for 2-3 weeks, then just left them there so I had less to carry home (or more room for souvenirs) and because they were already falling apart.  I would never dream of doing that now - I'm not sure if it's because I'm more aware of where these clothes come from (and the conditions that they're made in), I'm too tight to pay out for clothes that have such a short shelf-life, or I'm getting older and just can't wear cheap fashion clothes any more...

I'm now trying to take the approach that it's better to buy something of quality rather than a number of items that I don't like as much and aren't as good quality (although good quality doesn't always mean ethically produced).

And leading from this is another reason why I'm doing Project 333 - I want to wear good quality, (where possible) ethically sourced clothes that suit me.  It's so much better to have a smaller wardrobe like this than a packed wardrobe, full of tat.

The first hurdle

Unbelievably today, the first morning of the challenge, I have fallen at the first hurdle. 

Today is a working-from-home day, but also take-three-year-old-to-nursery day and nip-to-the-shops-if-I-have-the-time day, so casual clothes seemed about right.  The weather is glorious here, so jeans didn't seem appropriate.  It was then that I realised that if I wanted to wear one of my patterned tunics (which I did), I had no light-weight, non-work trousers, as the ones in my 333 wardrobe are patterned and would look really wrong (there's looking good with less and looking like you got dressed in the dark/have lost all sense of style).

So I've now included a pair of linen, grey/beige (very thin stripes) trousers.  They look good!  I'm substituting them for my crocs, which will only be worn around the house or at the beach (now I'll have to stick to that...).  I am also stupidly excited about this, as said trousers didn't fit a few weeks ago.

Hopefully I can manage a few more days without another substitution...

Monday 30 June 2014

The Wardrobe

So, after much deliberation and trial runs (yes, really), I've decided.  I've picked out my project 333 wardrobe:
This is the monochrome look.  Or just a couple of work shirts and a couple of my favourite tops (despite black and white not being "my" colours).

These are my trousers.  Two pairs of blue jeans (I'm sure I should choose different colours, but I don't have different coloured jeans and couldn't be bothered to go out and buy more - and sort of defeats the purpose), two pairs of patterned summer trousers (not everyone's taste, but I'm loving these.  I can also get away with them at work (just)), navy linen trousers (which passed the work test today), one pair of black work trousers and some purple cut-off shorts.
Here are my jackets for the next three months (apologies for the "on the stairs" presentation).  I think I am being optimistic, neither of them is particularly warm, which I may need for a British summer.  I have my camel-colour rain coat, which I love, for work/looking smart-ish and my green casual jacket for all other times.

Short-sleeved tops in black, navy and teal - mostly work wear, but could be either.

Cardigans.  Or if I don't want to sound old, "relaxed jackets" or "cover-ups".  In deep red (NOT burgundy.  That's important), brown, black and beige/mink.  For either work or otherwise (I have a smart-casual/casual workplace dress code)

Tunic tops.  I love these.  I especially love that they're in fashion (and therefore, in the shops) so I own several.  Two are brown - one is definitely casual and the other can be used for work - one brown/white and one red/white.  The more astute may notice that the red and brown patterned tunics have the same pattern.  I'm hoping I don't go off it.

This is a black, short-sleeved tunic top that was in the maybe pile for a while, plus a cream scarf and two necklaces which I like a lot.

These are my shoes.  I could probably have done a bit more to make them look less scabby.  I have one pair of black work shoes, one pair of brown work shoes, one pair of leather sandals, one pair of purple trainers and one pair of crocs.  I'm not sure if I should count the crocs, but they're there for now and will come out once I find something I really want to include that I've forgotten about.
It looks like a decent amount of clothes, laid out like this.  I'm starting to wonder if I've been doing Project 333 without realising (the whole wearing 20% of clothes 80% of the time theory).  Although I'm not sure I'll be saying this in a few weeks.

Saturday 28 June 2014

Who shall I choose?


I've written a list of potential candidates for the 333 wardrobe.  33 items is not many.  I could easily have 33 just for my work wardrobe.  I've separated some of the 33 in the wardrobe - it looks ridiculous.

There's this challenge...

... and I do like a challenge.

From the low-carb challenge (the diabetes doctor told me it wasn't sustainable - I managed 15 months and only stopped to modify it slightly when I became pregnant), to the "week's holiday to attend a wedding with only 5kg of hand luggage" challenge and probably more that I'm too embarrassed to remember.

I've always struggled with shopping, particularly clothes.  I think it started when I was a student, I had a job, so I had money to spend how I liked.  I always preferred shopping to drinking - but in 1990s Newcastle you didn't tend to need much cash to have a good night - so that's where most of my money went.  And almost 20 years later, this has carried on.

During my times of depression, I always knew it was serious when "the shopping didn't help" - when buying something lovely or, even better, a complete bargain! didn't lift my mood.  That's when I knew that I needed more intervention - either self-motivated or drugs (legal ones, obviously).  I shop when I'm happy, I shop when I'm not, but I shop, therefore I am.

The website "recovering shopaholic" has some interesting perspectives on why people like me shop here.  I'm not sure which (if any) apply to me, I'm not sure if I really want to self-examine that much, but it's time to do something about it.

I really don't want to attempt to add up how much I've spent over the years on clothes.  More clothes than I really need.  I've lost count how many clothes I've sent off to the charity shop still with their labels on, because they either didn't fit (and I never quite got around to taking them back for a refund - or of course I kept that because I'd soon have lost enough weight to fit into them, right?), because I bought them on impulse and never found the occasion to wear them, or - the worst - because they were a "bargain", no other reason.  On top of this, my weight has fluctuated considerably over the years - I bought into the idea that once clothes become too big you throw them away, to avoid the temptation of putting the weight back on... Big mistake.  Big credit card bill when it came to replacing them.

So this is the year of the clothes.  I've been through my wardrobe and taken out clothes that don't fit.  I've filled bags labelled with the size of the clothes and put them in the loft.  I've gone through the remaining clothes and taken out those which are the wrong colour for me (according to the colour people, I'm an autumn - maybe a warm autumn, maybe a deep autumn, they couldn't decide) so, with the exception of some of my favourite black clothes, out they went.  Then went the styles that don't suit me - the round-neck tops, the trousers that make legs over a size 10 look like parsnips, the short tops and jackets, etc etc.  All good.

Except it wasn't.  Because I had a mish-mash of clothes - a huge number of cream coloured cardigans/jackets (why?) - and nothing really fits together.  So I went shopping again.

It took my "week's holiday to attend a wedding with only 5kg of hand luggage" challenge to make me really that I just had too much, way more than I needed, so I'm doing the next step, the Project 333 challenge.

The Project 333 challenge is basically living with only 33 items of clothing for 3 months.  If done rigidly, this includes shoes (pairs, not individually), jewellery, accessories and of course clothes.  It doesn't include underwear, gym clothes (!) or nightwear.   It's a minimalist fashion challenge that is so far opposed to anything I've ever done before, but that's got to be good, right?

So that's what I'm doing.  From 1st July to 30th September.  It's going to be a long three months.