Saturday, March 21

The Art of Dressing Up—A Case for Personal Style in 2026


It’s a widely held belief that certain pieces of clothing should be reserved for special occasions. In my own life, fur stoles that I’ve found in vintage boutiques in Rome, decades-old lace dresses that I’ve tracked down in Paris and pre-loved Manolo Blahnik heels that were sourced in Osaka lie in wait for their turn in the spotlight. Kept hidden in garment bags and shoe boxes at the back of my wardrobe, these whispers of glamour sit patiently until an opportunity, like an invitation to a lavish soirèe with a compulsory dress code that would deem my everyday uniform inappropriate, say, strikes. But what keeps these moments of opulence separate from ordinary instances, if not ourselves?

Fittingly, as I was pondering this very statement, perennial British It girl Alexa Chung was speaking to fashion designer and psychoanalyst scion Bella Freud on her podcast Fashion Neurosis about the same topic. When asked if certain clothes make her feel better when she’s low, Chung responded that she instead believes in a philosophy of “total image commitment”. The question, then, isn’t whether to dress up or not. Instead, like Chung espouses, it’s why we have stopped dedicating ourselves to the pursuit of joyful extravagance through what we wear altogether.