There was a time I thought personal style was something you built.
Now, I think it’s something you return to.
Not through trends or reinvention, but through repetition. The quiet kind. The kind that happens slowly enough you almost don’t notice it at first.
A white linen shirt thrown over a chair.
The same worn denim softening year after year.
A sweater you reach for half-asleep on cool coastal mornings.
Gold jewelry you stop taking off because it has quietly become part of you.
The older I get, the less interested I am in owning more.
I want fewer things that feel better.
Softer fabrics. Better light. Pieces that hold memory. Objects that settle into everyday life so naturally they stop feeling like possessions altogether.
Maybe that’s part of growing older.
Or maybe it’s just learning the difference between consumption and comfort.
SoCal Scandi was never really built around minimalism in the stark sense of the word. It was built around emotional clarity. Around the idea that beauty should support your life, not complicate it.
I think that’s why I’m drawn to the same pieces again and again.
Not because they are perfect.
Because they let me feel more like myself.

The White Shirt
There is probably no piece I return to more than an oversized white button-down.
Part California ease, part Scandinavian restraint.
It works half-buttoned over denim. Thrown over a swimsuit after the beach. Wrinkled from travel. Rolled at the sleeves. Barely tucked in.
I love the versions that feel slightly imperfect — washed linen, softened cotton, fabric that moves instead of holds shape too tightly.
Some favorites lately:
- Jenni Kayne
- Sezane
- AYR
- Quince
- H&M Linen Collection
- Amazon oversized cotton shirts, honestly
The best ones never look too precious.

Denim That Feels Lived In
I don’t want denim that feels rigid anymore.
I want the pair that molds to your life.The pair you wear barefoot in the kitchen while making coffee.The pair that works with sandals, sneakers, oversized knits, or nothing more than saltwater hair and tired eyes.
Somewhere along the way, I stopped dressing for occasions and started dressing for atmosphere.
That shift changed everything.
In rotation:
- AYR
- Levi’s
- Mother
- Madewell
- Abercrombie’s relaxed denim, surprisingly
The goal is never perfection.
Only ease.

The Sweater You Reach For Without Thinking
There’s something deeply revealing about the pieces we reach for instinctively.
Not styled.
Not planned.
Not photographed for anyone else.
Just comfort.
The cream sweater left at the end of the bed.The oversized cashmere knit worn every cold morning.The soft gray sweatshirt thrown on after sunset walks near the water.
Those pieces say more about personal style than trends ever could.
I’ve learned that real luxury often looks quieter than we expect.
It looks like softness.
Like warmth.
Like something you wear for years instead of one season.
The sweaters I seem to return to most always share the same feeling – relaxed silhouettes, natural textures, pieces that soften a room just by being in it.
Lately I’ve been gravitating towards:
Jenni Kayne
Quince
Donni
Everlane
Faherty
The best ones feel less like fashion and more like familiarity.

Quiet Shoes
Simple leather sandals.
Worn-in white sneakers.
Bare feet in the sand.
I think style starts collapsing when everything tries too hard to announce itself.
The women whose style I admire most rarely look overdone.
They look comfortable inside themselves.
That’s different.
What I’m walking in as of late:
- Sam Edelman loafers
- Adidas Sambas
- Vivaia Mary Janes
- Quince leather slides
- Reef flip flops for slow beach walks
I appreciate pieces that honestly make getting dressed feel easy and work quietly with everything else.

Jewelry You Forget You’re Wearing
Most of the jewelry I treasure wasn’t bought all at once.
It arrived slowly.
My grandmother’s wedding bands.
My father’s ring worn smooth with time, now resting on my thumb.
A gold necklace from my mother that still carries her presence when I put it on.
I think that’s why I’ve never been especially drawn to loud jewelry or pieces that feel overly trend-driven. The things I wear most tend to become part of my everyday life quietly — softened by memory, worn almost unconsciously.
When I do add something newer, I’m usually drawn to the same feeling:
simple gold pieces,organic textures, designs that feel timeless rather than performative.
Lately I’ve found myself returning to Scandinavian-inspired brands like Waldor & Co., along with softer California staples from Gorjana that layer easily into everyday life without asking too much of you.
The best jewelry, at least to me, should make you feel something when you put it on.
Sometimes that feeling is comfort.
Sometimes confidence.
Sometimes memory.
But the pieces I keep returning to almost always carry something deeper than beauty alone.

What Becomes Part of You
For a long time, I thought style was about becoming someone.
Now I think it has more to do with recognizing yourself.
The pieces we return to again and again are rarely accidental.
They become part of the atmosphere of our lives — softened by memory, shaped by routine, carrying small pieces of who we are inside them.
A sweater worn through slow Sunday mornings.
Salt on the cuffs of linen at the end of summer.
Jewelry that still carries the presence of someone you love.
Denim softened by ordinary days that somehow mattered more than you realized while you were living them.
Maybe that’s why I’ve always viewed style less as fashion and more as a form of self-expression..
A quieter kind of art shaped slowly over time — through texture, memory, light, and the small things we keep returning to.
Like brushstrokes slowly becoming a portrait of your life.





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