05/29/2026
One thing I’ve noticed working with high-level clients is that the wardrobe is often the last thing that catches up with their lifestyle.
Not because they don’t care about image.
But because they genuinely do not have the time or mental space to manage it anymore.
The business evolved.
The schedule became heavier.
The environments multiplied.
The travel increased.
But the wardrobe system behind it never fully adapted.
So getting dressed becomes another exhausting decision in an already overloaded day.
The closet lacks cohesion.
Pieces no longer work together properly.
And despite having “a lot of clothes,” nothing feels operational anymore.
At a certain level, wardrobe management stops being just about fashion.
It becomes about reducing friction, creating consistency, and building a wardrobe that actually supports the way someone lives and operates day to day