Audit awareness
May 29, 2026 9:55 am
Hi ,
So Marielle didn't really think she had a wardrobe problem.
She had wardrobes... multiple, full ones, totalling more than 300 items. She'd accumulated this stock across twenty years in Brisbane, across roles and seasons and moments of optimism in fitting rooms. She had things she loved, things she kept meaning to wear, things that didn't fit, things she'd bought for occasions that hadn't arrived yet.
She did not have nothing to wear.
She had the opposite problem. She had too much, in too many directions, with no coherent logic pulling it together. She had an enormous amount of inventory and no supply chain.
The Wardrobe Audit can be confronting.
Not because Marielle has to let go of things. That part is surprisingly manageable once you understand the framework.
What's confronting is the accounting.
Standing in the middle of what you've accumulated and watching someone trained in this work, systematically lay it out...
what serves you, what doesn't, what you've been keeping out of guilt or sunk cost or the faint hope that one day you'll be someone who wears it.
Marielle is a CFO. She knows what a balance sheet looks like when a business has been carrying dead weight.
She had been carrying dead weight. Over half the 300 items left her wardrobe.
Not because they were bad pieces because honestly most of them were genuinely lovely.
But they were wrong for her palette.
They were wrong for her shape and proportions.
They were wrong for the woman entering new professional rooms, doing her Masters, building wealth and visibility.
Wrong for someone needing a wardrobe to function as infrastructure rather than costume.
Here is what remained:
- Deep and warmer colours that made her skin come alive, like "merlot" "pesto" and "amore".
- Straight and clean lines, no padding or flounces. Straight and wide legs. Raglan and halter tops.
- Classics. Tapered jackets. Low pumps and dark leather boots.Crisp blouses in her neutrals. Items built for longevity, not seasons.
- A wardrobe small enough to be coherent. Simple microfibre lingerie in black and nude. Only real jewellery (out with the oversized statement pieces she never reached for).
A wardrobe that told one clear story instead of several competing ones.
At the wrap up, Marielle commented she felt something unexpected. Not loss. Not even relief, exactly.
More like a sensation of having audited and gone through something properly. Now secure in the knowledge it's ready for what's coming.
Because Marielle has more rooms ahead. There will be more tables to show up at. More people will be deciding on who gets in and who gets taken seriously.
Marielle has spent twenty years building the substance.
The Wardrobe Audit was when she stopped leaving the signal to chance.
Wardrobe Audit is Step THREE of the Magnificence Package. The key turning point.
Until next week.
Take care,
Maree
Style harmony. Life symphony.