There was a time when I thought personal style meant constantly reinventing yourself.
A new season.
A new version of you.
Something different to chase.
But over time, I realized the pieces I loved most were never the loudest ones.
They were the ones I reached for without thinking.
The sweater left draped over the chair.
The denim worn soft with time.
The coat that somehow makes everything underneath it feel more like you.
Somewhere along the way, repetition became its own kind of clarity.
Not boring.
Not limiting.
Just honest.
Because when you stop dressing for every possible version of yourself,
you start dressing for the life you actually live.
And for me, that life has slowly become a kind of uniform.
Not rigid.
Not identical.
Just familiar in the best way.
The same tones returning again and again.
The same silhouettes softened over time.
Pieces that move easily between mornings at home, school drop-offs, dinners out, and quiet weekends near the water.
Less decision.
More ease.

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The White Button-Down
There may never be a piece I rely on more.
Slightly oversized.
Relaxed, but still structured enough to feel intentional.
I almost always come back to white shirts from Jenni Kayne, AYR, J.Crew, and occassionaly H&M—pieces that feel effortless without trying too hard. Something crisp, slightly undone, and easy enough to wear open over swimwear, tucked into denim, or layered beneath sweaters when the air cools at night.
It’s one of those rare pieces that never asks too much of you.

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The Denim
I’ve stopped searching for “perfect” denim.
Now I look for the pairs that soften with time and somehow become better because of it.
The ones that feel lived in.
Easy enough for everyday, but still pulled together enough to carry you through most moments of life.
My rotation almost always comes back to Mother Denim, AGOLDE, Levi’s, and AYR—especially styles that feel relaxed without losing shape. Nothing overly trend-driven. Just denim that feels like it belongs to your actual life.
The best pieces usually aren’t the newest ones.
They’re the ones that have stayed.

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The Oversized Sweater
This might be the most Scandinavian part of me.
Soft knits.
Neutral tones.
Something warm wrapped around your shoulders while the windows are open to cool air.
I tend to gravitate toward pieces from Jenni Kayne, Everlane, J.Crew or H&M and Zara when I find something beautifully simple in the right tone or texture.
There’s comfort in that kind of simplicity.
Especially now, when so much of life asks us to move faster than we’re meant to.

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The Shoes
Usually Adidas.
Sometimes sandals.
Always something I can move through my day in comfortably.
A well-worn pair of Sambas, Gazelles or Tokyos somehow works with almost everything I own—denim, oversized coats, relaxed trousers, even softer dresses when I want things to feel a little less polished.
I used to think style required a certain level of inconvenience.
Now I think the opposite is true.
Ease is part of the beauty.
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The Jewelry
The pieces I wear most aren’t necessarily the most valuable.
They’re the ones attached to memory.
My grandmother’s ring that feels familiar against my hand.
A necklace inherited from my mother.
Small things carried quietly through time.
I think that’s why I return to these classic treasures more than trends.
It feels personal in a way fast fashion never really can.
A memory. A loving feeling against my skin.

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The Coat
Every good uniform needs a final layer.
Something timeless enough to outlive seasons.
Something that makes even the simplest outfit feel considered.
For me, it’s usually a trench, an oversized wool coat, or something with that same Nordic sensibility I grew up around—structured, practical, quietly elegant.
The kind of piece that looks even better slightly oversized and worn often.

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Over time, I’ve realized my uniform isn’t really about clothing at all.
It’s about creating a life with less friction.
Less noise.
Less performance.
A way of moving through the world that feels grounded, familiar, and entirely your own.
And maybe that’s what personal style becomes eventually—
not constant reinvention,
but returning to yourself again and again.





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