Style self-check
Free Style Test
Use this short self-check when you want a clearer starting point before booking a consultation. It is not a replacement for a personal analysis, but it helps you name what your wardrobe should do for you.
1. What should your style communicate?
Choose the three words that feel most important right now:
- clear
- elegant
- approachable
- creative
- calm
- confident
- refined
- dynamic
- feminine
- structured
- relaxed
- distinctive
Write your three words down. They become your first style direction. A good outfit should support these words instead of fighting against them.
2. Where does your wardrobe lose energy?
Think about the last two weeks and mark every sentence that feels familiar:
- I own many pieces but still do not know what to wear.
- My outfits look fine, but not very personal.
- I buy individual items that do not work with the rest of my wardrobe.
- I often feel overdressed or underdressed.
- My colors do not feel harmonious.
- My clothes no longer match my role, body, or lifestyle.
The more points you marked, the more your wardrobe needs structure rather than more shopping.
3. What is your strongest style lever?
If color is the issue, start with a color consultation. If proportions and silhouettes are the issue, start with style analysis. If you already know what suits you but your wardrobe still feels chaotic, start with a wardrobe check.
4. Your next best step
Choose the statement that fits best:
I want clarity about colors. Start with Color Consultation or book a personal session.
I want to understand cuts, proportions, and outfit formulas. Start with Style Consultation or Style Analysis .
I want fewer bad purchases and better combinations. Start with Wardrobe Check or Wardrobe .
I need a quick decision for a concrete situation. Start with Style Question .
5. Make it personal
A style direction only becomes useful when it is translated into real clothes, real occasions, and your real body language. In a personal consultation, we connect colors, proportions, materials, wardrobe logic, and personal presence into one coherent style system.
