In 2020 I put something on my Do Something List that I almost talked myself out of: have fun with fashion. I ended up loving the results so much that I’ve kept a version of it every year since. This year I came up with “explore my personal style.” And while I haven’t necessarily turned into a style expert, or even fashion blogger, I have enjoyed the way that exploring my personal style has helped me insert more of ME into my daily life.
To be clear, your personal style should be a complete reflection of you, and should serve you in the season you are in. It does not need to be about fitting in, or reflect only the most popular trends. In today’s episode I’m sharing my conversation with Jenny Eversole of Style Space about why your personal style does matter and 5 steps to rediscovering it. Plus, you’ll hear about my own experience with their Stylist, Whitney Herrod Khader, and what I surprisingly learned from going through my closet with an expert.
About a few other things…
Do you struggle to create habits that stick? It’s not your fault. The truth is simple: you’ve been trying to form habits using methods designed for perfect robots–not real women living real lives. It’s time to change that. If I could help you gain confidence in creating habits AND guide you to uncover the ONE supportive habit to deeply care for yourself, could you commit 21 days to learning this method? The Sticky Habit Method is a 21-day course that revolutionizes the habit-formation process. It’s real habits for real women.
Sign up for the Go Getter Newsletter to get Progress Pointers in your inbox every Tuesday.
This episode is brought you by iHerb.
You can listen the episode below, or on Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Spotify, Youtube, Overcast, Stitcher, Pocketcasts, or search for “About Progress” wherever you get your podcasts. If you like the show please share it, subscribe, and leave a review!!
SHOW NOTES
Jenny’s website and Instagram
Finding Me Academy
DSL Guide
Try me FREE Class and check out my NEW Habit Course
Leave a rating and review for the podcast!
Lend your voice and experience + be featured on the show HERE
Join Monica on Facebook and Instagram
Songs Credit: Pleasant Pictures Music Club
TRANSCRIPT
Monica: Jenny Eversole and Whitney Herrod Khader, thank you so much for being on about progress.
Jenny: Thank you so much for having us, Monica. I have been such a fan of yours for so long and I’m excited to talk about style with you.
Monica: Great. And Whitney and I were able to get up close and personal in ways that I, we’ll, we’ll share later in the episode, which I’m excited to, to share.
And, and I have to say, Jenny, you’ve been extremely patient with me because we’ve been trying to arrange for this interview in the midst of my complications with my pregnancy and then having a newborn. So you are a trooper, and it was well worth the wait on my end.
I’m so excited to be talking about personal style because this is a topic I’ve never gone over really in six and a half years now of podcasting, and yet it’s been a really important part of coming back to my own identity and, and, and my own creativity and finding joy in my everyday life. So our discussion today is gonna be about why personal style matters and how to find it again, and how to use it in ways that can help pick you up on those days that you just really need it.
Before we dig into the material, I wanna start with a little bit of street cred for both of you, because you’re not just here because this is like, I, I saw you and thought you had a cute outfit and wanted to talk about it. You have a lot of professional experience. So let’s start with Jenny and just share about your professional background and how you’ve gotten into personal style.
Jenny: Yeah, sure. So Jenny Eversole is my name, and for over a decade I have been in the fashion and the style industry. I was a fashion designer and what gave me the idea for style space was actually having twins. Being, becoming a mom for the first time. So I completely relate to you, Monica, when you say transitions.
Mm-hmm. Yeah. So I had my twins and for about a year, even though I was a fashion designer creating beautiful clothing for other people, I felt like I was just surviving with my style and also carrying two humans, birthing two humans, and taking care of these premature infants. Wow. And yeah, so I was invited onto a TV show to introduce my fashion collections, about three months post pregnancy.
And this was a really big push to get me back into my style. Mm-hmm. And I called my sister, who was a stylist just a couple hours before the interview, and I was freaking out. Alicia, what should I wear to the interview? I know what I’m gonna say. I cannot, for the life of me, think of what to wear and how to do my hair and makeup again.
So over a 30 minute video call, she led me through what to wear, what colors would look best on my skin, and also with the camera lights. And for the first time in about 18 months, I felt like myself again. And it really translated onto camera in the interview and I gave such a polished presentation and it was a transformation and I realized how impactful style can transform me and also other people, and that’s where the idea spurred from for style space.
Monica: So tell us a little bit about style space, what it is.
Jenny: Yeah, so Style Space is a virtual styling platform where anyone can get expert style coaching and hair care makeup and skincare. And if you are feeling like you’re in a rut with your style, then come to Style space. And one of our amazing stylists like Whitney will basically go through your closet with you and tell you how to wear things in a different way or show you gaps in your closet and things that could really reinvent your wardrobe.
Monica: Mm-hmm. That was my experience. Don’t wanna give a spoiler, but that was my experience for sure. Whitney, tell us about your professional experience in the styling world.
Whitney: Yeah, absolutely. So I’ve been styling friends and family my entire life. But I actually also have a background in fashion design. I have a degree in fashion. And then right after graduation, landed my dream job with an international nonprofit where I traveled to Southeast Asia a few times a year and designed artisan made collections which was absolutely amazing.
And a few years later hit kind of a glass ceiling and ended up moving back to Texas with my husband and I started styling clients independently as well as virtually on style space and in a bridal boutique. And I, it all just kind of came together for me. I love design. I still sew, but something about putting pieces together and creative in new ways, and also challenging myself with the outfits that I would wear.
To these jobs where I was like, you know, needed to look fabulous and put together because I was styling other people. So I really challenged myself to really push boundaries with what I was wearing, and it was so much fun. So that’s, that’s kind of my background with my own personal journey I really feel connected to both of you with motherhood and how that has changed so much for me.
I feel like my entire life I was so extra and I loved it. And then the pandemic and pregnancy and motherhood all collided at the exact same time for me. And I invested in leggings and tennis shoes, which I didn’t even have. I didn’t even have them. Yeah, because I was always in heels and lipstick and you know, just a totally different, I lived a different life and so now I’m on my own journey.
While I’ve been styling people for years now. I’m starting to go on this new journey of finding myself again with mm-hmm. Through the lens of motherhood and working from home and all of that. So it’s, it’s really fun to have this conversation with you guys.
Monica: Love that so much. So we’re gonna have a ton of practical takeaways for our listeners and how to discover theirs because maybe they’ve been through a similar transition, like a life transition, or maybe it’s just a seasonal shift.
Maybe they’re aging, maybe their body is, is changing. Maybe they’ve had health problems that have made them need a new wardrobe, or they’re just feeling…there’s a lot of reasons why we need personal style and before we share those practical tips, I’d like to talk about that a little bit more. Like why does personal style even matter?
Because to be honest, this is a personal development show and a lot of what we’ve talked about has tended to be about how you are not your body and you know, your appearance is the least important thing about you. That’s been a discussion many times, so now I’m like bringing in this 180 discussion.
Seemingly it isn’t to me, and I know it’s not to either of you, let’s just. You know, with these women who are listening, why does personal style matter? Jenny, let’s, let’s start with you. What do you think?
Jenny: Yeah, so style is a powerful expression tool and every day we get to decide like how we are going to look and feel for the day before we do anything else.
We get dressed, we open our closets, and we get to set that intention about are we going to feel confident and bold and extra, or are we gonna. Comfortable and relaxed and relatable. Everyone gets to make that decision every single day when they open their closets. And many studies show that how we express ourselves translates to you how we feel about ourselves, how other people feel about us, our mood, our productivity.
Mm-hmm. And ultimately our success in life. I’m a big, big fan of style and I think everyone else should be too.
Monica: And when we, when we talk about style, the word that we keep putting with it is personal because that to me is the key part of what we’re going to share with these women today. It’s the personal take on your style.
It’s not like how to dress like you should be. How to look like someone else in your neighborhood or to copy a celebrity online. All of those can totally be part of the equation. It’s personal, and funnily enough, in our personal development show, everything we talk about, Even from time management to meal planning to you know, I’m trying to think what else habits, like anything we talk about, it all comes back to identity.
It’s something deeper, it’s personal. So I wanted some thoughts on that too. Whitney, for you, like why do you think identity has a piece of this puzzle with personal style and why it matters? Yeah, so
Whitney: like you said, like we don’t want to focus on what someone else is doing or how we are supposed to be showing up, right?
It’s how do we show up as our authentic selves? And part of that is taking what we like from other people, or learning tips on, oh wow, when I wear this color or I wear this silhouette, I look better, I feel better, I’m more comfortable in it. But ultimately it comes down to what you like and what makes you feel good, and what is that expression that you’re wanting to put out, just like what Jenny was talking about.
And so one of the biggest things that my, I work with on my clients is getting past the, is this on trend? Is am I allowed to wear this? Is this cool enough? It’s like, well, do you like it? Because ultimately confidence is the best thing you can put on, right? And if you are confident and you are owning what you’re wearing, then you’re gonna make it work.
Monica: I smiled when you brought up that example, because I remember asking you that with many of the pieces I held up. I’m like, is this in fashion anymore? I don’t know. But yeah, you, you helped me feel so much better about not only what I have in my closet, but what I wanted to wear and what was in alignment with who I am right now in my season.
And speaking of which, like, personal style. I’m gonna just say my, my 2 cents here it, it matters because it’s like you, you know, Jenny, you talked about, it’s an expression of who you are. It also helps you feel like yourself. So right now I’m at my postpartum period and I’ve been getting ready every day.
To me, just so people know, that means I get dressed if, if there’s no makeup, if it’s not a fancy outfit, that doesn’t matter. It’s just getting dressed. I have barely been out of the house. I don’t see anyone, I don’t go anywhere if I can help it, like that’s what I, I’m doing on purpose. So it’s not for others.
It’s been for me, it’s just to help me feel like myself. Any more thoughts on that?
Jenny: I completely agree with what you said. Knowing how I wanna feel for the day, that is the most important thing, and that translates into how I do my work and how I interact with my kids. Or when I go to the bakery, for example, down the street, how I’m going to be interacting with people that are serving me or I am serving for the day.
So yeah, it, it has a lot of impact in just your day-to-day and you yourself. Everyone and every body deserves amazing style and they can have amazing style.
Monica: I love that distinction right there. Everyone and every body, we’re not waiting for the ideal here. We’re, we’re starting here, we’re starting now. So let’s, let’s do that.
Let’s talk to the women who are like, okay, I can see more of why this matters, and I think I’m ready for multiple reasons. I’m ready. What, what can they do? And I know, Jenny, you have some really specific tips for us, so we’re gonna talk primarily to you on this. And Whitney, we have personal tips from you on how to like have some pick me up.
So just so people know where we’re going with this. So Jenny, let’s talk through your tips about what they can do to find their personal style.
Jenny: Yeah, so we have five steps that we recommend at style space. The first one it.,It requires a little bit of soul work, personal style. It requires knowing what you like.
And so thinking about three to four words that describe who you are and what your personality is, for example, mine is original, it’s chic, and it’s confident. Hmm. And I want anyone looking at me, anyone that knows me, just. Jenny is very this, this, and that. So think about what those three words are for you, three or four words.
And after that, the next step is creating an inspirational style board or a mood board. That’s what we as stylists say. You can go to Pinterest, for example, and you can type in chic women. Outfits. Yeah, and you can start pinning all these different ideas. You may have a hundred pins, and it could be the silhouette that you like, or it could be the color, the pattern, the shape, and then after you’ve got hundreds or a hundred items or so, then edit that down even further, down to about 10 to 20 items.
Make a collage, print it out and put it on your closet. This is how you want everything in your closet to feel and look. It won’t happen overnight, it never does, but it’s something that you can aspire to. And all these, I also wanted to say the images that you pin, they don’t have to represent who you are.
Now. They can be who you want to become.
Monica: Let me just speak to that. Aspirational style board thing because Absolutely To me, if they get stuck on number one, they can do number two. Like, just see what resonates with you. What do you like, find yourself pinning, you know? Or do you keep pinning like Oxfords? Then you know that you like, like this, like masculine kind of tense or like this really classic.
Piece. I’m like trying to speak in Whitney language right now. I’m like looking at her like, I’m not, I don’t even know if I’m using the right language here. Love it. But like, just notice what you keep pinning. Maybe you find like you love, like the really minimalist, like black, gray, white kind of outfit people, or maybe you’re like color and, and artistry.
And even that alone can give you those words. And the reason I’m saying that is because I know this with interior design. Like I, that’s what I’ve done with my friends. I, I love interior design. So like my friends who I’m helping with, that’s where we start. And then I wanna go back to number one because.
I, I did that kind of adjective thing on accident. I didn’t know that was gonna be your first tip. When I did this a couple months ago, I tried to come up with like five words that describe my style and I literally put that in my closet, like you said, like I put it on a Post-it note and it has helped me so much because I have been feeling so blah in all my transitions and I’ve almost been like, do I just dump this closet?
Do I just like start all over? And I did need to edit, but I’m just gonna share my words. Okay? So my words are classic. Artistic contrast and for me that’s contrast of feminine and masculine. Cause I like both and comfortable and it’s honestly not only helped me get dressed, but it’s helped me feel like me instead of just always doing like the same outfit on repeat that doesn’t match any of those things be just because I’ve lost my kind of confidence with it.
So I just wanted to vouch for that. Anything to add to that
Jenny: it sounded like that was quite intuitive for you and you know, with all of your work that you do at about progress, it seems like this was just a natural process for you to come up with your personal style.
Monica: Well, I, I mean, it goes back to what you said with number one though, you kind of have to do some soul searching and weirdly, that’s, that’s what this has helped me do right now is in. Days of my life being like, who am I? Am I just like an old middle-aged mom with a newborn? And it’s like no. This is who you are.
And even if that means your clothes change and your body changes, like this is who you are. So those are great tips. I’ll just re recap those really quick before we go on to the next three. Ask yourself, who are you and what’s your personal style? Language? Number two, create an aspirational style board.
What’s number three?
Jenny: Okay. Just like you said, we transition and we, our, our bodies change, our lifestyles change, and we need to make room for those new transitional pieces. Mm-hmm. So getting rid of the things that no longer suit us. Whether it was just a past life thing or
Monica: a fad
Jenny: slice thing. A fad style?
Mm-hmm. Or just it doesn’t bring you joy…Marie Kondo. Yeah. So take out all those pieces that no longer represent who you are and the aspirational style board that you have created. Hmm. And once you have all of those pieces out, you’re going to start to see the things that actually work for you. So every time you open your closet in the morning, You will see the things that you actually want to wear.
It will save a lot more time and energy and thought process, getting ready in the morning,
Monica: that’s a great tip. Okay, so edit. Now it’s time to edit. And women might have problems with that. And that’s where I would say style space comes in to play. Like get someone on your team to help have different eyes to go through your closet.
And that’s what Whitney helped me do it, it really was. Just like a good experience because it did give me a, a second set of eyes to help me see like, does this line up with my, my, my style vision and who I am, but also just like where I am in my life right now. And we’re gonna talk more about that specifically.
But I just wanted to make that plug right there because the, the, the style space service I got was create your closet and there’s many others too, but that’s a good set of eyes.
Whitney: You did amazing by the way. Oh good. I feel like. You just needed permission to trust your gut on a lot of things, if that makes sense.
Yeah. Like, you’re like, okay, I know this no longer serves me and I know this is the direction that I’m going in. So yeah, you were, you were a great client. I love Oh good. I was working with you.
Monica: I’m glad to hear that. Okay, so we’ve got three steps down. What’s the fourth step?
Jenny: Okay, so the fourth tip is look for versatility and consistency with your wardrobe.
Many people have challenges bringing in one-off pieces that they really maybe Impulsed bought, or they thought this would be really great for this one occasion, but it doesn’t really fit the rest of their wardrobe. And then you just have all these standalone pieces that don’t go together. So think about the five outfit rule.
Can one piece be worn five different ways with five different items in my closet. Hmm. So for example, does that one t-shirt you bought, does it go with five different sets of pants? Does it go with five different blazers? Vice versa, and can I wear this look five different
Monica: ways? Okay. That’s something I would not.
Thought about honestly, but that, that, I like that, that’s a good kind of touchstone as we are looking to expand our, our wardrobe.
Jenny: Yeah, and it goes back to your vision war too. Mm-hmm. Your style, mission board, like they all go together and it just helps create that consistency and your personal style.
Mm-hmm.
Monica: And with that too, I think we’d just like add another rule that we bring up a lot in the personal development stuff that we talk about here is it takes time. So like curating your wardrobe and adding that versatility and consistency is just gonna take time to like match that aspirational board that they created.
Jenny: Yes. And lastly I’d say just experiment and have fun though there. Specific rules in fashion and design about what looks good on a certain body type. For example, where do you want your eyes to have the attention drawn to? That’s one of the rules. However, knowing the rules, you can also break them to, you can, like back to what Whitney said, you’re wearing things to make you feel good, to make you feel confident.
As long as that translates over, experiment with it. Have fun. Lean into whatever style you want to implement.
Monica: Fantastic. This is when I wanna bring Whitney in. Because of my own session that we’ve alluded to many times now. We don’t get to just keep teasing people.
Let’s talk about this, this session I had with you, like I said, it was a curator at your closet session. I’ll just tell people how it worked, I set an appointment online with you was super easy and then, You had some questions for me to consider and that helped me with number one, especially just to have that deep work done.
So I like knew a little bit more about what I was looking to get from the session. And there were other questions too, and I loved it because of my job, right? I’m like, I’m glad. Look at them. Yeah, they’re going deeper. They know what we need to like be thinking about. Now. You and I met for 90 minutes and I had my whole closet set out on a bed.
We just put up one piece at a time and went through like, do I keep this? Do I donate it? That may sound so simple, but it’s not like when you get to like this shirt that you spend a lot of money on but doesn’t really look very good on you or it never really fit. Right? But you have that kind of like inner hold on it that I have to keep it cuz that would be such a waste or so-and-so gave this to me, or I really want to look like this, but I don’t have the confidence.
It’s again, so much deeper. And you just helped me sort through it, you know, with that deep breath. Yeah, that deeper connection, but also just that, that, that lens right there of, of this is what you say you want to look like and this is who you are. So does that match? And you never gave me the answers either.
You, you helped me make those decisions for myself. And so by the end, I had a curated closet, which felt really good, but I was so. By the end, I also felt happy. I felt like, oh, that closet reflects me. And I also felt excited because I knew I could do that fifth step that you brought up, Jenny. I could experiment more and just have fun, like it gave me permission to just be released from it.
So now to your perspective as a stylist who’s helping someone through you curate your closet. You do that, that session, curate your closet, you also help another session. You go through people’s closets and help them know, okay, you’re having a hard time with this piece, but you wanna keep it, here’s how we compare it with something else.
Or here’s some style ideas like you help me think, like I could embroider a heart over a hole and a wool. Yeah, that was a wool sweater idea. Mm-hmm. Yeah. Okay. So I just wanted to. Any tips that you have for someone who is going into a session with you? Like what should they do in advance? What should they expect?
Anything there?
Whitney: Yeah, so if someone is looking for a full comprehensive style experience I kind of base my sessions off of style goals. So you had the closet goals and that was always the very first session I would recommend because in order to know where we’re going, we need to know where we’re at, right.
And I think knowing, going through someone’s closet is always going to be the first step if you want the best, most comprehensive experience. And so in, in that, we did identify a few gaps in your wardrobe or things that might need to be replaced. And so the second step would be shopping goals. And so having just a little, little brief 30 minute session where we chat about sizes and budgets, all of that.
Store preferences, sustainability, if that’s something that’s important to you. And then I will do the shopping on my end and then send links. And then the third session that I offer is outfit goals, which is what I think we could do again together. Yeah, which is going into the closet again, combining new and old pieces and creating different looks.
So, What Jenny was talking about with the versatility aspect. Can this be worn five ways? That’s what I like to do. I like to pull out more challenging pieces and come up with three to five different ways of wearing it, whether that’s dressing something up or taking something that’s a bit more elevated and mixing it in with your casual day-to-day wardrobe.
And one of the biggest tips I have for people is to focus on basics, and it makes it a lot more real. For clients as well. If you have 80% basics in your wardrobe, which I think you do, which is why this is the part of this was easier because you already understood the value of investing in good basics that you liked.
And then you can have fun. With 20% of your wardrobe. So balancing that 80 20, it’s really difficult to put together cohesive outfits or have a lot of versatility in your closet when everything is a statement piece, because it’s more difficult to mix and match. And a basic might look different for different people.
For some, it might look like a bunch of, you know, colorful t-shirts, and for others it might be a collection of structured blazers, you know, it’s going to be different depending on everyone’s lifestyle. But that’s where, that’s where I think can come in and help figure it out.
Monica: I got a preview of those other two services too, because you did tell me, at the end of the session, you sent me some notes like, here are some stores I’d recommend that match your style.
Mm-hmm. And, and, and then you also, you know, along the way said, how about, what about that shirt you held up earlier? Those pants would look really good with that shirt. I was like, what the number you had thought of that combo? Let’s speak to the resistance people might be facing when they’re like, this sounds super bougie.
Like, can I afford like, A style session or like a makeup artist or like this hairstylist person to like just come and gimme perspective. I’m just gonna say after having this experience, I think this saves so much money alone. Because I agree. Yeah. I, I went and bought like two things after our discussion.
I mostly have what I have now before mm-hmm. In my closet. And it helped me buy less actually, because I felt less like susceptible to the Instagram ads that, that track who I’m following and the, the, the post I pause on like the style ones. So there’s that. But I would like to know from Jenny actually, what would be your counter to someone who’s like, this is too bougie for me to do any of these kinds of services.
This is outta. Is this for celebrities? Yes. Oh,
Jenny: well, that is why I created style Space is so that we can have expert stylist like Whitney, meet with you, and sort through your closet and help you with your style goals in a convenient and affordable way. Because traditionally, stylists are in Hollywood and they’re serving a very different clientele and they have very different needs.
But now styling is becoming so mainstream that anyone and everyone can afford it, and it actually. Like you said, it helps you define your goals so that you no longer have that impulse to you buy things that you don’t need, that don’t reflect who you are. You’re basically more informed about what you need, what you like, and what’s gonna serve you in your closet.
Mm-hmm.
Monica: Whitney, let’s, let’s end by talking about some pick me up tricks, because like I said at the end, I just felt good. And I want women to feel that way. So let’s say maybe they haven’t been able to go through their closet necessarily yet. But they, they, maybe they will.
What are some pick me up tips that you have for them that they can try right here, right now?
Whitney: So one of my favorites is layers. I am a huge advocate for layering and I’d be layering right now if it wasn’t 80 degrees in Texas right now. Yeah. For me personally, working from home and having a toddler I live in leggings and matching yoga sets and I can instantly elevate it by adding a fun jacket or blazer on top.
Hmm. And it looks like I put so much effort in when I just put a layer on top. So that’s my. Number one, top tip. Another one is to have some easy go-to jewelry, whether that’s earrings, necklace, rings, whatever. That I know. I don’t have to think about what I’m going to wear. I just know that I like these things together and I can throw this on with any outfit and I feel more polished and I feel more put together.
And that’s kinda what I did today. It’s been a, you know, sick kid and all of that. Yeah. It’s like this is, this is what I can give. And having. Grace with yourself, I think is crucial to this whole experience, whether it’s I’m going to give myself. To show up at 50% because that’s all I have to give today.
Or I’m gonna give myself grace to maybe make a mistake and push the boundary a little too far with my style and I’m just gonna have fun, even if it’s not the perfect look. I think that plays a lot into it. But yeah, those are my top two with layering and having some go-to jewelry. As well as just accessorizing with some fun things, whether that’s a belt or, you know, a statement, pair of shoes.
You can take basics so far with accessories. Mm-hmm. And a few fun jackets that you could either really invest in or thrift and yeah, add your own little touches, whether that’s with some embroidery or adding some fun and trim to cover up a stain. There’s, you don’t have to have a lot of. In order to have fun and be creative
Monica: with your style.
And that’s the message I’d love to end on there, is how we can just not take this so seriously. Even though we talked about why it matters and it does, and it is serious in many, many, many ways. Let’s just release ourselves to have a little bit of fun with this, to get creative and our own style of creativity, what that looks like for us.
I love to end with a final, like do something challenge where Where my interviewees share one small thing that listeners can do in the spirit of expressing creativity and having fun. Let’s go to each of you. What would you say, Jenny? Let’s start with you and I’m Whitney. I
Jenny: would say create your vision board for your style.
Think about those three things that represent you, those adjectives to describe you, that you want other people to think of you as, and mostly yourself. One more thing. Print out that vision board, put it in your closet and start working towards
Monica: it. Love it. Thank you. Whitney, what about you?
Whitney: So I would say go into your closet, grab that piece that you don’t know what to do with that.
You are terrified of style. It might still be new with tags. If it fits you and you like it and you want to wear it, wear it. Hmm. And wear it all the time. Wear all of your favorite pieces all the time, honestly. But that would be my, my thing is to go in and give yourself permission just to wear your favorite thing on a normal day.
Yeah. Because you deserve to feel special all the time. Even if you’re just hanging out at home on the couch or going through a coffee drive through to get a, a, a pick me up drink in the afternoon. You deserve to feel special. Even if no one’s around to.
Monica: So I’ll, I’ll just add on that too. That’s awesome.
Earlier this week, one of my few outings since the baby’s been born has just been doctor appointments. And I am like, mm-hmm. I’m sick of these. I’ve been to so many, and I found myself reaching to like, for my usual, like basic outfit, but then I put on my favorite pair of Oxfords. You know, that I just have not been putting on because I’ve been around the house or I’ve just been trying to go for like the quick slip on shoes while I go pick up the kids and bring ’em back.
And that little, little ch choice just made a huge difference for me that day. And it just made me feel good and like myself and reflected my who I am. You two are so awesome with your practical ways we can do this.
Thank you for sharing your experiences too. Before we leave Jenny, what do you want them to know about where they can go if they’re like, I’m interested in this for makeup or hair or, or my closet, where should they go?
Jenny: www.style space.com is our website. You can search between 50 different styling sessions and hair, clothing, makeup and skincare, and sort through the styling sessions that reflect your need at the time, and you can book with any one of our stylists at the time that is most convenient for you Also.
If you didn’t remember everything that I said about how to achieve your style in five steps, don’t worry. You can go and download a free guide on our website and in the guide we actually include more things like how to discover your body type, how to dress your body type, how to measure yourself to make even better decisions when you online shop, and
Monica: where can they find that.
Jenny: If you go to the homepage. Mm-hmm. Style space.com. Then just at the very top it says, download my free guide to my five steps to my dream style.
Monica: Awesome. We will link to that in the show notes. If they’re on Instagram, cuz that’s where a lot of our audience are, where should they go to look more into style space and also see what stylists like Whitney are doing with their clients.
Jenny: So style Space dot official is where you can find style, space and follow along for extra tips and tricks for your style.
Monica: Cool. Well, this was so fun. Now I wanna go. It was so much fun. Yeah. I’m like, now I’m gonna go and put on some Oxfords and do something fun with my, my style as I leave today. Thank you so much for your time. I really appreciate you both.
. So here we go. Jenny Eversol and Whitney Herd. I’m, I told you I’m gonna do this. I’m gonna edit myself. Whitney Herrod Khader. Got it. Okay. Jenny Eversol and Whitney Herd ca. Guys, I have, I know this.
The problem is I haven’t done an interview in months, so this is why I’m Rusty. So we’ll do it again. Kate Jenny Eversol and Whitney Herrod Khader, thank you so much for being on about progress.