*Image above via TBBC, featuring an adorable jon jon, which will be available for $23 (incl shipping!) starting at 10 A.M. this morning.

Starting this morning at 10 A.M. EST, TBBC will be offering an extra 50% off and free shipping (!) on its sale section. This is always a frenzy, with pieces selling out in a hot minute. I would stock your cart just prior to go time in a few minutes and check out ASAP. My top picks:

beaufort bonnet company pink price sale

+Polly play dresses (select patterns) — only $15 shipped!!! These are great staples for camp/school everyday wear. This is my top priority this sale launch! I want to get a bunch for mini. Also easy to throw on over a swimsuit on way to/from pool. I would take your daughter’s true size in this. I find the brand generally runs narrow but long.

+Night nights for girls or boys — these will certainly be the first thing to go, with some pajama sets as inexpensive as $15 (shipped!). I find these run narrow and snug, and they will shrink when dried (I always run through the washing machine and dryer), so I would size up. Hoping to snag these for mini.

+Sheffield shorts — only $18 in select patterns. These are so cute and have a short inseam (which I prefer). Run a tiny bit small.

+Sweatshirts — on sale for $17. These are such a great buy — an elevated take on a fall/winter essential. I love the fun patterns. This bow style is my favorite for mini, but they have a bunch on sale; I have this striped one in my cart for micro. Pair with white leggings (for girls) and jeans (for boys) for an easy fall look.

+Patterned slickers for boys or girls — I have bought a few of these over the years and you just can’t beat the prints. Adorable. I specifically like them for spring/summer showers because they are unlined. A lot of the other rain jackets we’ve owned are lined in cotton, which is great for cooler weather. These are very light. I always get asked after them when the children wear them!

+Dorothy day dresses — gingham, windowpane, etc. I really love this style because it can grow with the child. I’ve stretched to make this dress fit in one size across two seasons.

+Children’s luggage — the duffels are only $21! Great for travel. I’m hoping to snag one for each child for our upcoming trips this summer. Their weekenders are also cute – a tiny bit smaller but great for overnight trips or even camp, day trips, etc.

+Cheryl shorts — cute for camp!

+Select jon jons only $23! I am picky about patterns on jon jons because sometimes I feel the pattern, combined with the style’s cut, can read too cutesy. This checked one is adorable.

Todd Snyder Men’s Sale.

While we’re talking sales, Todd Snyder, one of my go-to spots to pick up pieces that walk the line between traditional and on-trend for Mr. Magpie, is running an up-to-40% off sale for the Fourth. One of the main draws of this brand is that they do interesting colors for men — not just your standard navy, khaki, green. They offer lilacs! Yellows! Seafoam greens! Add some fun to your man’s wardrobe…

todd snyder mens sale

MR. MAGPIE WEARS THIS RUGBY STRIPE SWEATSHIRT ALL THE TIME

HE ALSO HAS A BUNCH OF THEIR LS STRIPED TEES, INCLUDING THIS ONE AND THIS — GREAT FOR PAIRING WITH WHITE OR LIGHT WASH DENIM

HE OWNS SEVERAL PAIRS OF THESE SLIM FIT CHINOS — GREAT COLOR OPTIONS

THESE DRAWSTRING SHORTS ARE GREAT FOR WEEKEND WEAR — MR. MAGPIE OWNS A FEW PAIRS, INCLUDING ONE IN THEIR CORDUROY FABRIC

BUY HIM THIS AND SET ASIDE AS A FALL SURPRISE…THIS IS SUCH A GREAT LAYERING PIECE; MR. MAGPIE OWNS IN A MAROON AND WOULD WEAR OVER A BUTTON-DOWN, UNDER A VEST, ETC…

P.S. Great children’s basics at reasonable prices.

P.P.S. A slapdash guide to D.C. (Comments are a gold mine!)

P.P.P.S. Your guide to dressing for summer weddings.

I’ve clipped back into a running regimen these past few weeks. Cliche, but I immediately feel more like myself. Both running and writing give me the space I need to process my life. Writing confronts emotional and intellectual complexities directly, but running somehow, semi-miraculously, enables me to digest these things “in the background.” I don’t ever set out on a run with an intention to “think through” a particular issue, and sometimes I’m not even aware I’m in the throes of analysis. But I invariably return to my front door with conclusions. Sometimes, these suddenly-claimed clarities are so acute that I must go immediately to my room to write down what’s emerged in the form of to-dos, sweat dripping off my arm right onto the notepad as if extra punctuation. It is a generative, addictive pastime. I have had such a long relationship with it that I know there will be days in the not too distant future where I will dread my running habit, and so I am currently letting myself enjoy a renewed honeymoon phase.

But the way I run now is so different from the way I ran in my teens, twenties, and even my early thirties. At earlier stages in my life, I ran to stay thin. I was focused on pace, mileage, and calories burned. Nowadays, I run for mental clarity and the general benefits of moving my body — it just feels good to break a sweat, elevate my heart rate, and stretch my muscles. And so my runs are more about form and consistency. I can’t say my current pace is doing wonders for my self-esteem but I actively try not to care. I only check pace at the mile markers, and even then, and more inclined to shrug than adjust my tempo based on how I’m doing. Instead, my goals right now are to run every other day for around 30 minutes, and to focus on form. On the latter front, at every mile marker, I check in with myself with the following: “Is your chin up? Are your shoulders back? Are your arms in close at your sides? Does the gait feel easy and solid?” I also like to remind myself throughout these jogs to “Run smart, not hard,” something I picked up from a Nike Run Club coach. To me, this means that if I’m totally burning my energy pounding up a hill, I coach myself to fall back a bit. Go slow. Keep up the reserves for the last five minutes, when I am always flagging. If I have a little extra gas in the tank, by contrast, I accelerate my pace. This clement approach is wildly different from the way I used to run, which was as if I was being chased by a pack of wild dogs — I would be furious with myself if I could not keep up a strenuous pace I’d set for myself! I remember sprinting the final stretches of many miles just to keep tempo with my target. Not so any more. This is the Jen of 38: a bit gentler, a bit less disciplined, for better or worse. (I think for better.)

Sharing these scattershot thoughts in case you need a boost to get outside and break a sweat. Other tacks I use to ease myself back into a fitness routine:

  1. A good playlist! I have been loving running to Harry Styles’ new album. The first five tracks in particular are fantastic — up tempo, fun, catchy!
  2. An every-other-day commitment. I picked this strategy up from a Magpie. I find it much, much easier to commit to this than “I hope to run 3-4 times this week, whenever I can squeeze it in.” This pattern makes me enjoy my days off and prevents me from situations where I haven’t run in three days and then need to cram in a few runs at the end of a week right after one another.
  3. Schedule workouts on your calendar. In NYC, I would run every other morning, as soon as our nanny would arrive, and it was helpful to have that time absolutely cemented into my weekly planner, blocked out in caps and all. At that time, I found it easier to run before digging into my day, noting that it could be difficult to unplug and squeeze in a run when I was in the midst of working on something. In Bethesda, I have been finding the converse easier: I like to finish my day at 4 P.M. and use my run as a “buffer” to digest before clipping into Mom mode for the evening. This has in part been achieved by organizing my work such that I am always doing my heavy writing / thinking in the morning (maker’s time!) and focusing on lighter weight tasks with a finer granularity in the afternoons.
  4. Buy new gear! Having fresh running gear has helped me ease into this routine with renewed energy. My favorite recent buys —

GINGHAM CROP TOP

THESE WHITE RUNNING SHORTS — LOVE THE COLORS, THE POCKET DESIGN IS GOOD, AND I LIKE THE HIGH WAIST

BOXER-STYLE RUNNING SHORTS — THE ELASTIC ON THESE IS PRETTY SNUG, SO IF YOU ARE BETWEEN SIZES, I WOULD GO UP…I TOOK AN XS AND IT FITS WELL BUT CAN IMAGINE IF YOU ARE BETWEEN SIZES, IT WOULD BE A BIT SNUG

TANKS FROM TARGET, SWEATY BETTY (50% OFF!), AND LULU

LINED RIBBED CROP TOP

BOUGHT THESE 6″ BIKER SHORTS AFTER SEEING THEM ON LIZ ADAMS

FEETURES MAKES THE BEST RUNNING SOCKS — OBSESSED

I ALWAYS RUN WITH A HAT TO KEEP SUN OUT OF MY EYES / OFF MY FACE — I LIKE THESE UNFUSSY CHAMPION “DAD HATS”

Even more chic fitness finds for summer below…

HIGH-RISE WHITE RUNNING SHORTS WITH PASTEL ACCENTS AND CURVED HEM

MARYSIA SCALLOPED IVORY SEERSUCKER TENNIS DRESS — THIS SILHOUETTE IS ABSOLUTELY STUNNING (AND IT’S ON SALE FOR 60% OFF!)

RETRO-INSPIRED VERSATILE NYLON ATHLETIC SHORTS WITH EMBROIDERED LOGO FROM TORY BURCH IN LAVENDER

MINT GREEN LIGHTWEIGHT TRAINING SHOES FROM NIKE

POWERBEATS PRO WIRELESS EARBUDS IN AN IVORY COLOR…DOESN’T HURT THAT THESE ARE ON SALE AT TARGET FOR 20% OFF

CROPPED RIBBED SCOOP NECK TANK TOP IN BLACK WITH LETTUCE HEM — PERFECT PIECE FOR LOWER INTENSITY WORKOUTS

ADORABLE “HAPPY” WHITE CREW SOCKS WITH MULTICOLOR STRIPE FOR A LITTLE EXTRA PEP IN YOUR STEP

CHIC SHORT SLEEVE POLO TENNIS DRESS WITH CONTRAST STRIPES AND A PLEATED SKIRT

SUSTAINABLY MADE COLORFUL SPORTS BRA FROM LACOSTE WITH CRISS CROSS STRAPS — PAIRS WITH THE COORDINATING PERFORMANCE PLEATED TENNIS SKIRT THAT COMES WITH BUILT-IN SHORTIES

HIGH-NECK CROPPED PERFORMANCE TANK WITH SIGNATURE NIKE CHECK IN ARMY GREEN

PEACH-COLORED RIBBED SPORTS BRA AND CAPRI LEGGING MATCHING SET BECAUSE WORKING OUT IN STYLE FEELS UNDENIABLY GOOD

MESH AND NEOPRENE CLEARANCE ATHLETIC SNEAKERS IN DUSTY ROSE WITH SPECKLED FOAM SOLE

COTTON-JERSEY PASTEL TURQUOISE CREWNECK SWEATSHIRT FROM SPORTY & RICH

HIGH-RISE STRETCHY DRI-FIT NIKE LEGGINGS IN MINT GREEN — OVER HALF-OFF AT NET-A-PORTER!

SET OF TWO RETRO-STYLE FOREST GREEN AND WHITE WRIST SWEATBANDS…THIS PICK IS THE PERFECT COMBINATION OF STYLISH AND FUNCTIONAL

6-INCH INSEAM FLATTERING BIKER SHORTS WITH SIDE AND BACK ZIP POCKETS

P.S. More on running.

P.P.S. June obsessions.

P.P.P.S. Good friends.

*Image above featuring Evi Grintela’s scalloped trim striped shirtdress.

Love a bold stripe for summer. Below, some favorite finds —

striped summer fashion

MULTICOLOR STRIPE SUNDRESS

GREEN STRIPE SMOCKED DRESS

GREEN STRIPE TOTE

PINK AND YELLOW STRIPE TOTE

SOLID AND STRIPED BATHING SUIT

WOVEN TOTE

WIDE-LEG TROUSERS

EVI GRINTELA STRIPE DRESS

STRIPED TEE

VIBI VENEZIA FLATS — 70% OFF

NAVY STRIPE SKIRT

KULE TANK DRESS

CROCHETED MINI

CLARE VIVIER TOTE

CAFTAN DRESS

STRIPED BOATNECK TEE

STRIPED SHIRTDRESS

Even more great striped finds for summer here…

P.S. What beauty tips do you stick to?

P.P.S. 18 chic and affordable cover-ups.

P.P.P.S. Musings on my 20 year high school reunion.

*Image via Wit and Delight.

Do you have a workplace mantra? I have been lucky to work with a number of creative and inspired people across my career and have benefited from some of their go-tos on a number of occasions. I wanted to share a few that I found proved true as I worked alongside others:

“Culture eats strategy for breakfast.” This always made me stop and think about how well I was upholding the values of the organization, and how much time I was dedicating to fostering openness and goodwill across my team. Culture-building can take on a range of forms, and frankly (this will come next) it has to come from the top. On a concrete level, culture-building sometimes means doing happy hours and group outings, but mostly, it means carving out one-on-one time to check in with individual team members and scheduling activities that map to core culture values. As an example, in several of my previous roles, we wanted a culture that celebrated creativity, speed, outside-the-box thinking, etc. So we would craft design sessions and group brainstorms to model the kind of design thinking we wanted, while encouraging people to work together towards a common goal. One of the most effective activities (this was several jobs ago) entailed performing SWOT analyses of our own work as a collective. I was always surprised at how much junior members enjoyed participating in these, and I felt like we all enjoyed a greater measure of ownership afterwards.

“Culture flows from the top down.” Leadership sets the tone. Period. It doesn’t matter how great the managers are, the individual contributors are, the mission is, etc. It all comes from the top. There have been a few occasions over the course of my career where it became obvious that one member of the leadership team was not a good culture fit, and it always felt like his/her team sort of rotted from the inside out and then began to rub off on other teams, too. It can be extremely difficult to correct or treat this situation. Sometimes, this is ruinous for an organization.

“Focus is your scarcest resource.” Something I pinned above my desk while in a design-centric role at a start-up, where it was easy to find myself sucked into tasks that should not have been prioritized.

“Talk to the extremes.” This is critical for any product- or design-focused role. Talk to the extreme users — how are your “power users” engaging with what you are building? And why are “non-users” NOT using your product? So many insights from these conversations.

“Onward!” I’ve adopted this as a personal mantra over the years. Keep moving forward, with enthusiasm. I stole this from my last official boss — he signed all of his emails with this and it established a sense of momentum and optimism in the workplace. Encountering this phrase multiple times throughout a day made me feel more prone to take risks, try things, and then move on if they did not pan out — energy we needed as a high-octane start-up.

“If someone else can do it 80% as well as you can, delegate.” It was always difficult for me to relinquish control; I will admit that I am prone to micro-management. But this phrasing helped me maneuver around the prospect of delegation. Of course the “80%” number is arbitrary, but it affords enough of a guardrail to help with making an assessment as to whether something should be passed along.

What about you? What phrases have shaped you as an employee, manager, or leader? Do you keep anything like this pinned above your desk?

Post-Scripts.

+The dotted lines between work life and personal life.

+My last installment of my ongoing fictional work.

+Have you ever had a bad boss?

+Advice for graduates.

Shopping Break.

+Three dresses I’m currently lusting after: this Lug Von Siga (50% off), this bustier Staud (in the fab blue!), and this crocheted SEA (60% off!).

+The perfect wedge to wear all summer long. Also comes in white.

+The chic breakfast tray I never knew I always needed.

+Perfect back-to-work dress. The drop waist adds interest. Also comes in a fab bold pattern that reminds me of something by La Double J.

+Check out this bold Celia B dress — 40% off.

+I’m already looking ahead to a long car trip we’ll have in July — I shared tons of great car activities for littles here, but this looks like a clever solution for my daughter, who LOVES to draw.

+Speaking of car travel with littles, we are still loving our Nuna Rava carseats. I was torn between Clek and Nuna but my daughter is prone to carsickness and you can take the entire Rava seat cover off and launder it, so that clinched the deal. If you buy them here, you get a gift card back — that’s the promotion I used to buy ours since they are impossible to find on sale.

+Does anyone have a preferred whitening strip brand? I keep hearing about Lumineux. Anyone used?

+These personalized keychains would be a cute favor/gift — or a way to personalize a set of keys you’re giving a parent/neighbor/friend (add something cheeky/personal as the inscription!)

+I asked last week (scroll to post-scripts) about self-tanning drop recommendations, and a few of you came back with Saltyface, a brand I’d never even heard of. I wanted to mention that I normally just use a heavy hand with powder bronzer to achieve a glow! I love (!!!) this brand’s bronzer and have used it for over a decade now with no intention of switching to anything else. It’s perfect. It is pricey, but a palette lasts a very long time. It’s well-packed/does not crumble.

+These letterpress prayer cards would be a beautiful keepsake for you or a loved one. We actually put a prayer that my MIL wrote in her own hand in one of these lucite frames and keep it on mini’s dresser!

+Have been eyeing this Loewe basket bag for literally three seasons and counting.

+Love these shorts.

+Cutest monogrammed children’s sweatshirt.

+These flats are fab. I feel like they’d go perfectly with everything from white jeans to dresses all summer long.

+This gorgeous Self-Portrait just went on serious sale.

+These handmade crochet bags are just beyond fab.

+This dress for a little is beyond adorable.

+Pretty patchwork dress.

*Image above via La Double J featuring their “swing dress,” which they release each season in dazzling patterns. I love this kaleidoscopic forest green one this season — but this punchy floral is also fab.

There has been a mounting demand for dresses without smocking, puffed sleeves, or anything frou-frou! Do I hear 90s minimalism on its way back in? Today, sharing a suite of dresses without the embellishments of recent trends —

DRESSES WITHOUT PUFFED SLEEVES

GREEN ZARA DRESS

WHITE A-LINE MINI

PAISLEY MINI (ON SALE FROM $450 TO $120?!)

LA DOUBLE J MAXI TEE DRESS

LA LIGNE BELTED MIDI (ALSO COMES IN BLACK)

AGUA BENDITA SCOOPNECK PATTERNED MAXI

RED LINEN AND SILK MIDI

LA DOUBLE J PATTERNED MINI TEE DRESS

TORY BURCH OLIVE DRESS (ONE OF THEIR CURRENT BEST-SELLING PIECES)

LINEN MINI

POINTELLE SCOOPNECK

KHAKI WRAP DRESS

BLUE CROCHETED MIDI

POINTELLE COLLARED DRESS

Even more options below…

P.S. A great cocktail to try.

P.P.S. Target run!

P.P.P.S. Missing my friend, and finding her memory in my new home.

My Latest Snag: Summer Running Gear.

Oh, my on-and-off-again relationship with running! I was into it for awhile this spring, and then a series of colds, sinus infections, ear infections, etc swept through our home for what felt like months on end, followed by end-of-school-year chaos and the lovely visit from my brother and his family, all of which upended my commitment. I am finally clipping back in and mama mia it is a slow start. New running gear always encourages the habit, though. A few of the pieces I’ve picked up recently (will share more in a post this week — have found so many great workout pieces!):

THESE AMAZON RUNNING SHORTS HAVE GOTTEN SUCH RAVE REVIEWS — HAD TO CHECK THEM OUT MYSELF

THESE RUNNING SHORTS FROM SWEATY BETTY

THIS GINGHAM CROP TOP

MORE OF THESE $12 RUNNING TANKS — MY ABSOLUTE FAVORITE, AND COME IN TONS OF COLORS; A LOOSE AND BREATHABLE FIT, SUPER-SOFT (ALMOST PERFORMANCE?) FABRIC, AND LAUNDER SURPRISINGLY WELL

ONE OF THESE SWEATY BETTY TANKS — ON SALE FOR OVER 50% OFF!

Eyeing these new sneaks from Nike! Love all three colors!

You’re Soooo Popular: Early Summer Finds.

The most popular items on Magpie this week:

bestselling summer fashion

SET OF THREE STACKING WOVEN WICKER TRAYS WITH HANDLES

DEEP TURQUOISE CERAMIC OLIVE OIL BOTTLE FROM EMILE HENRY

WOVEN RATTAN FLOWER-SHAPED LIGHTWEIGHT EARRINGS…ADORABLE AND BUDGET-FRIENDLY AS WELL

TIERED SQUARE-NECK MIDI DRESS WITH SMOCKED BODICE IN A CLASSIC BLUE PINSTRIPE — ONE OF MY MOST-WORN DRESSES

HIGH-CUT LILAC SEERSUCKER ONE-PIECE SWIMSUIT WITH SQUARE NECKLINE — THIS PIECE IS ON SALE AT NET-A-PORTER FOR 40% OFF

IVORY CROCHETED MIDI SKIRT

SIMPLE FITTED BREATHABLE COTTON SLEEVELESS MIDI DRESS IN BLACK — A SUMMER WARDROBE STAPLE

VERSATILE MULTICOLOR FISH PRINTED SARONG

LARGE HANDMADE BONE INLAY WOODEN STRIPED MIRROR

VINTAGE-STYLE HANDMADE RED, WHITE, AND BLUE SHORT SLEEVE MAXI DRESS

LIGHT BLUE RETRO WASHED HALF-ZIP SWEATSHIRT

TIERED MIDI DRESS WITH A SWEETHEART NECKLINE AND TIE-SHOULDER DETAILING IN A GORGEOUS MAHOGANY FLORAL PRINT

ABSTRACT CITRUS PATTERNED CLASSIC ONE-PIECE SWIMSUIT WITH BUILT-IN UNDERWIRE SUPPORT

CYLINDRICAL CLEAR ACRYLIC PITCHER…FOR ALL THE SUNSET HAPPY HOURS AHEAD

FLAT STRAPPY SLIP-ON COLORED LEATHER SANDAL…MORE COLORS HERE

SMOCKED SHORT SLEEVE MIDI DRESS WITH PUFF SLEEVES AND RUFFLE DETAILING

Weekend Musings: Turning 38.

I turn 38 tomorrow. Each year, on the eve of my birthday, I prod myself: “What have I learned?” Last year, I observed: “I think my main achievements have been in the mental wellness space. I find myself far more emotionally resourceful and self-aware after this past year. Perhaps COVID required this of all of us: Mr. Magpie took up meditation, and I focused on small and intentional ways to make my life feel more measured and less harried. I now find myself in near-constant, self-conscious conversation with myself.”

This year, I am recognizing some emotional well-being breakthroughs relating to apologies and boundary-setting (especially as it pertains to my responsibilities at home and at work). I prefer to brush things off (“don’t worry about it!”) and say “yes” to every request and invitation, but these past few months in particular have entailed a lot of “thank you for the apology” and “thank you for asking, but no / I can’t do that.” This has been difficult for me (I would so prefer to placate!), but in the end has brought me a greater measure of peace. Life is busy and short — I would rather spend it in service of the initiatives and people I love, and as free as possible of sublimated frustrations. So I am learning to become increasingly choosy about meetings, invitations, requests to help, and increasingly adept at communicating hurt feelings as they arise. I am a work in progress, to be sure. But the through-line is this: drown out the noise, not the feelings. Let those feelings breathe.

What have you learned so far this year?

Shopping Break.

+Oo! Love this textured twist-neck tank! So unexpected and chic. Imagine with some gold hoops (<<I own and love this inexpensive pair — the quality is good for the price)!

+Everyone’s favorite denim shorts. If you buy, you get a $25 gift card you can then use towards something practical like underwear and it’s sort of like getting something you need for free.

+These wavy wall-mount shelves are so chic! Also love these lucite ones for children’s books in a nursery!

+Hearing good things about this concealer — has anyone tried?

+Another great swimsuit. Yikes! So many great options this season. I might have to claim this one!

+Name to know: Flora Sardalos. J’adore!

+Emerson Fry’s popular caftan is back!

+Love this on-trend crocheted top from Old Navy.

+Alice Walk just launched some great knits.

+Great decorative mirror for under $75.

+Fun $60 bag — reminds me of the one from Marni.

+This dress makes me happy.

+Sweetest bridal look.

+Pants appropriate for work that pull-on like sweats? Yes pls.

+Have seen these $12 sunnies on a number of chic peas — the shape is so different and fun!

+This pointelle sweater is beyond adorable. I like the idea of wearing it with a white pencil skirt — sort of a throwback Charlotte York moment.

+These Natives come in such great patterns.

+Agua Bendita does it again. And this fab Agua is 40% off!

+Love this crochet cover up — more great cover ups here (<<these ones on the affordable side).

+SEA dress at a J. Crew price. Also love the top version (also on sale!)

+This Staud bag!

*Image via Maria del Orden featuring their chic chic gingham overalls!

If you are looking for a break from summery floral prints, gingham is an equally classic warm-weather pattern. Below, some of my favorite checked finds —

SMOCKED BLUE MIDI DRESS WITH ELASTIC PUFF SLEEVES AND LEG SLIT

SQUARE-NECK BUTTON-FRONT TOP WITH VOLUMINOUS SLEEVES

SEAMLESS SCOOP NECK CROPPED PASTEL ACTIVE TANK (BOUGHT THIS MYSELF!) — CUTE PAIRED WITH THE COORDINATING BIKE SHORTS

STUNNING BALLET PINK GINGHAM A-LINE PLEATED MIDI DRESS WITH SWEETHEART NECKLINE…THIS FLIRTY PIECE IS DEFINITE HEAD-TURNER

MINI SHIFT DRESS WITH SCALLOPED DETAILING AND HIGH NECKLINE — SUCH A TIMELESS SILHOUETTE WITH OVERSIZED COVERED BUTTONS

EMBROIDERED LARGE WATERPROOF ZIP-UP BAG — PERFECT TO HOLD ALL OF YOUR POOLSIDE NECESSITIES

PASTEL GINGHAM PERSONALIZED STATIONARY SET

COTTON-CANVAS TOTE WITH HANDWOVEN RATTAN BASE AND LEATHER ACCENTS — ONE OF MY FAVORITE SUMMER TOTE. ! LOVE PATTERN-MIXING WITH THIS

ONE PIECE SWIMSUIT WITH UNDERWIRE SUPPORT AND TIE STRAP DETAIL IN TURQUOISE

A-LINE DRESS WITH PLEATED TIERED SKIRT AND RUFFLED NECKLINE WITH LACE TRIM

MOCK NECK BUTTON FRONT MIDI-LENGTH FLUTTER SLEEVE SHIRTDRESS WITH WAIST TIE — BREATHABLE COTTON MATERIAL AND EASY TO THROW ON

MULTICOLOR SQUARE NECK BIKINI TOP WITH RUFFLE DETAILING….THIS PIECE IS CURRENTLY HALF-OFF TOO

HIGH-WAISTED PAPERBAG STYLE LIGHTWEIGHT SHORTS IN YELLOW, PAIRS PERFECTLY WITH THIS MATCHING PEPLUM STYLE TOP

V-NECK CLASSIC ONE PIECE SWIMSUIT WITH OPEN BACK DETAIL

SUPER FLATTERING STRAIGHT LEG COTTON OVERALLS WITH FRONT PATCH POCKET

HIGH QUALITY LINEN TABLECLOTH IN AN AQUA GINGHAM PRINT…SUCH AN EASY WAY TO ELEVATE YOUR DINING TABLE FOR SUMMER

P.S. Design-forward finds for everyday life.

P.P.S. Some of my all-time favorite beauty finds.

P.P.P.S. Landings.

*Image via Posse — this shot makes me smile. The model is wearing this top.

While my siblings and siblings-in-law were visiting earlier this month, we had an interesting conversation about animated Disney characters, and their anthropomorphism. This led to a hilarious discussion about “the most attractive animated Disney characters.” I’m going to use this as a prompt for a new set of icebreakers to answer at your leisure in the comments. I absolutely love (!) your responses to these questions — please join in the fun whether or not you’ve commented before. (You can see earlier installments here and here.)

  1. Animated character crush.
  2. Weirdest nickname you’ve ever had.
  3. Something that would be better if its name were different.
  4. The last thing that surprised you.
  5. Which “Friends” character do you relate to the most?
  6. Do you identify more with “the misfits” or “the mainstream”?
  7. First thing you notice when meeting a new person.
  8. Meal you make when alone.
  9. What could you talk about for hours?
  10. Most quoted movie line in your house.
  11. Your best friend, in three words.
  12. “There are years that ask questions and years that answer.” – Zora Neale Hurston. Is this year asking or answering?

I will go first:

  1. Animated character crush. Robin Hood. Duh.
  2. Weirdest nickname you’ve ever had. There have been many. “Boonzie” comes to mind first.
  3. Something that would be better if its name were different. Shrimp. I love shrimp but hate the feeling of the word in my mouth.
  4. The last thing that surprised you. My three-year-old son was using the ice dispenser on the fridge (already a shock – did not know he knew how to operate it? or that he liked ice?), and a few cubes scattered across the floor. “Holy Moly,” he said. Holy Moly?! Where did he learn this?! Little rabbits have big ears. I was also surprised by how much I have enjoyed re-watching the Indiana Jones trilogy with Mr. Magpie. I watch them with an enormous grin plastered across my face — they represent the most transportive of nostalgia trips. We were talking afterwards about how much Spielberg has shaped our understanding of “the phenomenal” (be it dinosaurs, extraterrestrials, religious relics, aquatic predators, etc). Wow — what an enormous contributor he has been to the collective imagination of our generation.
  5. Which “Friends” character do you relate to the most? Sadly, Monica. Clean freak over here.
  6. Do you identify more with “the misfits” or “the mainstream”? Neither. In some ways, I am a rule-follower and conformist. In other ways, I feel I have always been a bit of an outsider — a wool-gatherer.
  7. First thing you notice when meeting a new person. Probably body language — do I feel immediately at ease with this person? Do I feel stiff and uncomfortable? I think I gather these clues via body posture, eye contact, etc.
  8. Meal you make when alone. A tartine (open-faced sandwich) using whatever we have in our fridge — avocado with feta sprinkled with a vinaigrette on top, leftover chicken with arugula and a vinaigrette on top, fried egg with sharp cheddar and a vinaigrette on top, etc. The vinaigrette on the top is key for me. One thing about me, guys: I love vinegar.
  9. Most quoted movie line in your house. From “Best In Show”: “You’re going to see a lot of merlot out there” and “Really shake out the arms, guys.” If you’ve never seen this movie, these will make no sense. Even if you have seen this movie, these may still make no sense. But both are completely apt responses to a startling range of questions between Mr. Magpie and I. The merlot one is good when we are processing whether or not to follow a convention that other people/friends/family members are doing, i.e., Mr. Magpie: “Do I need to wear a tie to this thing?” Me: “I don’t know, you’re going to see a lot of merlot out there.” The “arms” one is a sort of sarcastic jab when one or the other of us is in the midst of a project, cleaning something, etc.
  10. What could you talk about for hours? Books.
  11. Your best friend, in three words. Sturdy, sharp-as-a-tack, and passionate. (Mr. Magpie!)
  12. “There are years that ask questions and years that answer.” – Zora Neale Hurston. Is this year asking or answering? Answering, thank God.

Shopping Break.

+Chicest linen mini.

+Been into flatforms (if you can’t tell from my obsession with these sandals) — this sneaker-style pair is pretty fab, too. I would pair with a breezy white dress like this.

+Best bra ever, on sale. It’s the only underwire I wear. Otherwise I wear these inexpensive seamless racerbacks.

+OBSESSED WITH THIS BAG.

+The neighbor boys lent my children these graphic novels (there are many in the series, and some sister series, too) and mini is obsessed! She has been sketching her own comics! I just bought her this make-your-own comic booklet, but this Kid Made Modern set would be such a fun gift/rainy day activity, too.

+How cute is this $25 rug for a children’s bathroom or play area?

+Gorgeous white lace caftan. 20% off with code YOURULE.

+Clever snack organizer — would be great for an airplane ride or car trip with littles.

+Love the monogram font on this embroidered tote bag.

+Love the silhouette and color of this stick lamp from Target. All my best Target finds here.

+This ultra-chic Ulla Johnson dress is on sale!

+A caftan from Pippa Holt is #goals. Until then, this Anthro lookalike!

+Martha has a fun new boutique — love this shopping tote and these nautical platters.

+Bottega vibes, part I and Bottega vibes, part II! (Both way less expensive than actual Bottega — of which I love this tiny mini bag.)

+A closet staple, in either or both colors.

+Adore the monogram on these cocktail napkins.

+FUN statement necklace. Would look great with a white dress or tee.

*Image via Posse featuring their pink floral skirt, currently 40% off!

Currently in my cart: this Agua Bendita maxi skirt. Its discovery led me to discover a trove of fabulous statement skirts for summer 2022! On the wallet-friendlier side, let me highlight this $25 gauze steal — a Magpie just wrote me to rave about how comfortable and on-trend it is! — as well as this $110 white statement that reminds me of something from Miguelina. I love pairing high-waisted skirts with these FP tanks — currently on sale for $20 in a range of colors here!

STATEMENT SKIRTS FOR SUMMER

BLUE AND WHITE STRIPE DRAWSTRING SKIRT (UNDER $100)

EYELET MAXI AND MATCHING TOP

FARM RIO WIGGLY STRIPE SKIRT

ZIG ZAG MIDI SKIRT

PINK LEAF MAXI SKIRT AND WHITE TEE

PINK LINEN TOILE SKIRT (40% OFF!)

MANGO STRIPED CROP TOP AND SKIRT

STRAPPY BODYSUIT

APRICOT MIDI ($35!)

STRIPED MIDI SKIRT

NAVY BOTANICAL PATTERN SKIRT AND TOP

Even more options below…

P.S. Statement pants for summer here.

P.P.S. I’ve received so many interesting notes and emails in response to this post on female friendships. In one, a Magpie wrote: “…we aren’t taught to mourn or recognize the ending of female friendships the same way we are with romantic relationships. [My friend] pointed out that if someone were to ask about a former best friend, we might be embarrassed or not know how to explain that the friendship has ended. Meanwhile if it was an unsuspecting question about a now ex, it would feel more normal or comfortable to simply say “we broke up” and everyone would nod, understand and move on. I thought that was a good insight.” Super interesting! I hadn’t thought about this tack.

P.P.P.S. Recent Amazon finds.

*Image via DC City Girl.

In his memoir, Dave Grohl describes the long drive from Springfield, VA up to Evanston, IL that his family took most summers of his youth. I related viscerally to his description of the trek, as Mr. Magpie and I drove from Glover Park (D.C.) to Lincoln Park (Chicago) about a decade ago, newlyweds setting out on our own. Like Grohl, I recall the transition from the familiar hills of the mid-Atlantic to the endless flatlands of Ohio and Illinois — a featureless blur of cornfield — and then, suddenly: Chicago. Chicago! Chicago rises like a mirage out of the plains. Grohl describes its sudden pitch into view as you barrel down I-90 perfectly: “Chicago appears, triumphant.” Just so. There is something about that approach that still stirs awe, even years after living there, and countless trips into and out of the city during our stay. The Chicago that ascends out of Lake Michigan as you approach from the northwest is sprawling, powerful, industrial, towering, and with each passing mile, you are only aware of your impossible smallness alongside it.

It’s funny, this sensation, because Chicago itself — its people, its vibe — did not exactly match its domineering cityscape. The Chicago I knew (I lived in Lincoln Park and then Ukrainian Village, for reference) was pleasantly unfussy and approachable. It possessed its own brand of sophistication, to be sure, but it was a quiet kind that did not announce itself. Given this low-key polish, the cityscape felt almost garish by comparison. And yet, in a strange way, it fit: there was something about the steady, driving, nearly mechanical pulse of that city — the screech of the L along the raised tracks, the sluice of the Chicago River through its center, the gridlock and elbow-to-elbow high-rises of the Loop, the clank of the wide metal bridges — that meshed perfectly with the no-nonsense, keep-moving-forward way in which Chicagoans appeared to live and carry on their business. Perhaps this sensibility was in part shaped by the elements. It would be negative 12 and there would be five feet of snow on the ground, and still my Chicago friends would arrive for happy hours and book clubs without so much as a word about the inclemencies they had faced en route. The Chicagoans I knew were unfazed by the cold, and similarly unimpressed by other instances of flash and drama. They seemed, in general, to be a thoroughly level-headed, unflappable sort: as tough and sturdy as the cityscape itself.

The food scene there bore a similar understatedly powerful profile: Chicago was (and still is) a hotbed for culinary innovation, with many world-renowned chefs and Michelin-starred restaurants within its city limits, but it did not boast the borderline frenetic, dine-here-or-be-dead-forever feeling of New York’s restaurant circuit. We loved dining in New York, but it was always a production — even when simply angling to get into a neighborhood joint at the last minute. Chicago, probably owing to size/census/density of restaurants/etc, never felt that way — in fact, seemed approachable and attainable! — but the food was superb and inventive all the same. Mr. Magpie has often debated whether he found Chicago or NY more exciting from a food standpoint, which probably amounts to sacrilege for some given New York’s global significance, but I have to agree: we had some of the best meals of our lives in Chicago, from fine dining haute cuisine (Alinea! Tru!) to farm-to-table magic (so authentic in Chicago and perfected in my opinion at Publican) to cuisines-I’ve-never-heard-of-before (Macanese at Fat Rice, R.I.P.) to the best damn bowl of ramen I’ve ever had (at the generically-named Wasabi).

Anyhow.

I have been sitting here watching Chicago pour out of my fingertips. I did not know I had so much to say about the city, and all it took was Dave Grohl’s description of the city as “triumphant” to bring me here. What this says to me is how powerful place is. When I think about “memories,” I assume immediately I will be calling forth the people I love. But the places I have lived, the corners of this world I have at various points in my life claimed as my own, carry their fair measure, too. My daughter was born in a hospital overlooking Lake Michigan on a cold March morning, and my son in one over Central Park on a warm May day. I cannot separate those backdrops from their birth experiences, and so they “stitch in” to the very fabric of the tenderest and wildest moments of this blessed life. Their imprints are fixed, permanently, as though footprints in cement, on these cornerstone experiences.

But Chicago, New York, D.C., Charlottesville, and Lyon are woven into even the quietest of background memories, too: the mute and trivial ones that coalesce around the recollection of a date night, or a reference in a book, or the name of a restaurant. The ones I only vaguely acknowledge without realizing how wide and deep their panoramas are within my sensorial library. I still feel, for example, the line of avuncular-seeming buildings along Central Park West looking upon me with a kind of benign supervision while I’d walk Tilly at dusk those hundreds of nights in Manhattan. I still sense faces peering or not peering out of windows: the distinctively New York feeling of being anonymous and celebrity at once. I feel, too, the warmth and welcome of Chicago in June, as we’d walk through Lincoln Park towards Lake Michigan: crisp, cloudless azure over manicured green lawns that seemed to invite us to the water, banishing the city of its wicked winter sorrows. And the cold is there, too, of course: Mr. Magpie a dark form shoveling behind a snow-speckled window for what felt like months on end; the numbing feeling of air that was too cold to register as I walked through nearly-waist-deep-snow at the University of Chicago; the endless bracing against the needling wind along Chicago Ave. Just as easily, I feel the heavy, torpid weight of a D.C. summer against the icy blast of the buildings in which I worked, the way my fingers would go from blue with cold to almost buoyed by thick, hot air the minute I’d make my way to my car out in Tyson’s Corner. It’s an unpopular opinion, but I like that humid weight. I grew up in it, accommodated its stillness. It, too, is sewn into me, as sure as the scars that brought my children into this world. These are the physical geographies that have shaped my imagination. They have mediated my understanding of the world and baptized me in its phenomena. As an example, I have written elsewhere that my hometown of D.C. has always seemed to me “small and slack — like a mildly overgrown thicket or a tumbler of water that’s been sitting, sweating, in the heat, a ring of water pooled around its basin.  There is a languor to it — especially in the summer — underscored by the heavy shade of trees you’ll find most anywhere in Northwest D.C. in particular, and the torpid buzz of cicadas, and the canopy of humidity.  The lush green spaces are unmanicured; street signs are often partially obscured by vines or branches; medians will occasionally boast knee-high grass.  There is a thickness, a drawl to things, that has always made me think of the city as part wild — but not wild in the awe-inspiring sense of the Rocky Mountains; wild in the sense of the wood playhouse my father built with birch planks from Hechingers and installed at the top of a small hill in our backyard, beneath a shady pine tree.” Of course these impressions are idiosyncratic, anchored by the thick and overgrown median that ran down my childhood street and the proximity of my childhood home to Rock Creek Park. To many, D.C. is an awe-inspiring metropolis, with nothing unmanicured or slack about it. But I think it must be part of the human experience to find consonance between our lives and the landscapes in which they unfold, and so Chicago is perhaps not only a triumph owing to the architecture we all (Dave Grohl included) agree to be impressive but because it was my first home away from home with my new husband. We were pioneers then, and the city accommodated that spirit. The city then drew us through some of the toughest days of our lives — grief, loss, failure — and spit us out at the other end, and so it is easy for me to fixate upon the marching mechanical grind of its enclave.

Yes, it seems to me that the more I write about these geographies to which I have belonged, the more porous the lines become. I find the physical and emotional transpose onto one another. I will not even attempt an assay, so alloyed my malleable memories and the spaces in which they unfolded have become. Instead, I will observe them with greater care. The tree on the right side of our back porch in which those mating cardinals nest, emblems of the domestic happiness in which I am currently ensconced; the movement of branches outside my writing studio, conductresses no doubt to the wandering instrument of my imagination; the fireflies that began to emerge in droves this past week, the first siren of this new and hopefully permanent lifestyle we have built in Bethesda.

I want to remember everything —

Post-Scripts.

+Musings on Manhattan.

+At the peak of the pandemic, I wrote enthusiastically about New York, describing it as “still as shock” in spite of reports elsewhere that it was a dying city.

+Our decision to leave NYC.

+It was tough to live there when I was sick and we were cloistered for months on end. But we made it.

Shopping Break.

+I haven’t used any tanning products/drops/lotions since my early 20s, but have become so fastidious about sunscreen that I feel I never get any good color any more. Do you all prefer Isle of Paradise or Tan Luxe? These seem to be the front-runners for me. Tips/alternatives welcome.

+Forgot to include this $30 Marysia lookalike in my roundup of H&M finds yesterday!

+Juliet Dunn dress in a great flamingo pink on sale here, plus extra 20% off with code YOURULE. Also love this fun top by the same brand (50% off!), with or without its matching shorts! A friend of mine sent me a picture of herself wearing the shorts and matching top in a different print and said she is stopped all the time by women asking where she got the set! So cute!

+Another fab shorts set situation — so chic!

+These decorative waste bins are insanely cute and so well-priced! How much do we love this floral or this seashell print?

+25% off everything at Nantucket Kids with code BIRTHDAY. This dress in this exact toile was one of my favorite pieces mini owned — I stretched and had her wear it two summer seasons in a row. Love all of their prints, though — these seahorse shorts and this pima popsicle dress are so fun!

+This pearl-trim straw hat is fab.

+Fun STEM-oriented activity to keep on hand for a rainy day. More activity ideas here and here.

+Hunza G vibes for $60.

+LOVE this bustier dress.

+I can’t get over this adorable striped dress for a little one.

+This lace midi is nothing short of beautiful.

+This Zimmermann mini is FAB.

+Lacoste polos for boys on sale for $31 here, at least in the size 3T!

+Pam Munson did a special collab with Schumacher! Such gorgeous embroidered pieces available!

Wow! Some incredible H&M finds at the moment —

h&m finds june 2022

CIRCLE SKIRT

THIS SMOCKED DENIM DRESS – – WEAR WITH AN INTERESTING SHOE LIKE A FISHERMAN SANDAL

BRODERIE ANGLAISE MIDI SKIRT

BALLOON-SLEEVED DRESS — WOULD WEAR AS A COVER UP

OBSESSED WITH THIS ROOMY COTTON TOTE IN A FAB ORANGE-RED HUE — YOU CAN PERSONALIZE BY ADDING THESE!

FITNESS SHORTS AND MATCHING TOP — PAIR WITH A BLACK BASEBALL CAP AND NIKE SUPERREPS

THESE LINEN-BLEND SHORTS — WEAR OVER A SWIMSUIT!

THIS FAB LITTLE CROCHET BAG!!!

ON TREND CANVAS HAT

JACQUARD TOTE

SEAMLESS SPORTS CROP TOP

And a few finds pour les enfants

P.S. Strategies for achieving high-end looks for less.

P.P.S. 10 everyday outfits that won’t break the bank.

P.P.P.S. Collecting.

Q: My baby’s first birthday!

A: Happy birthday, baby! In terms of gifts, I shared some favorites for littles under two here. At around a year, my son was obsessed with this light up dump truck (the music will haunt you, but he truly loved it), these magnetic toys, and of course board books. The lift the flap ones are great, especially Dear Zoo and any of the Spot ones. My daughter started getting really into Little People at around a year, too — just the right size for little fists. Musical instruments and Honey Stick crayons are also great for supervised play at this age. Bath toys are also always a great gift for this age — keep them busy in that tub! My children liked sets like this waterproof book and floaties, squirt toys, and of course these cups. Micro also loves these Greentoys boats in the bath!

For birthday outfits — mini has worn the birthday dresses/outfits from Proper Peony, Bella Bliss, and TBBC over the years. I have her wear them to other birthday parties after! Eliza James and Sal E Pimenta also have cute birthday options.

Don’t forget the photo-ready birthday hat — love this one and this one.

Happy birthday!

Q: Winter coats on sale!

A: Smart gal — this is definitely the time to buy, as so many fab pieces are marked way down. Here are a few favorite discounted outerwear finds:

A TRULY PERFECT WEAR-OVER-EVERYTHING, SOPHISTICATED COAT

ALSO LOVE THIS LONGER-LENGTH BELTED STYLE FROM THE SAME BRAND

QUILTED LONGLINE BARBOUR

COLLARED FAUX FUR — VERY MARGO TENENBAUM…I HAVE SOMETHING SIMILAR THAT IS PERFECT FOR WEARING OVER LONG FORMAL DRESSES IN THE WINTER, OR THROWING ON WITH JEANS TO DRESS THINGS UP

THIS HALF-SHERPA-HALF-QUILTED EVERLANE (ON SALE FOR UNDER $75)

DRAMATIC WOOL COLLAR COAT — JUST FAB

FOR ATHLETIC WEAR – HELLY HENSEN HAS SOME TOP-NOTCH, HI-TECH PUFFER JACKETS ON SALE…THIS LIGHTER WEIGHT VARIATION WAS VERY POPULAR AMONG MAGPIES THIS PAST WINTER

ALL THE COOL GIRLS WEAR TOTEME…THIS ONE IS ALSO EPIC

LOVE THE COLLAR ON THIS QUILTED STAND STUDIO (60% OFF!)

THIS ISABEL MARANT SHACKET HAS BEEN SUPER TRENDY THE PAST FEW SEASONS

Less dead-of-winter and more transitional (all on sale): this SEA I’ve been drooling over for two seasons, this quilted and belted lilac, this lined Barbour, this quilted J. Crew, this Ganni – love all the details, and this mixed media Veronica Beard.

Q: Bump and big boob friendly blue summer dress for family photos — and outfit for my two year old girl.

A: Yay! I shared a bunch of beauties that might work here, but a few that jump out at me given your expectations —

THIS FRANCES HART

THIS BODEN

THIS STAUD

THIS DONDOLO

THIS MI GOLONDRINA

For your little one — this blue floral Luli and Me (don’t be afraid to mix prints!), this Jacadi or this one, this Feltman Brothers, this Sal E Pimenta (or this similar one on super sale — note that this brand runs small), or this striped La Coqueta, or this one! And then there’s this super classic Bailey Brothers!

Q: Inspo to go back to my business casual office. Tops and great shoes to wear with jeans so I can still blend with the kids in the office a little while also showing I’m a grown up.

A: I like the idea of striped tees with high-waisted white denim — throw on a blazer if you need to impress, and pair with delicate layered gold jewelry (like this and this) to add polish. A few other great blouses/tops I love to pair with your favorite jeans…

THIS HOPE FOR FLOWERS

DOEN’S JANE BLOUSE — MY SISTER OWNS THIS IN SEVERAL COLORS AND PAIRS WITH HIGH WAISTED DENIM AND CELINE ESPADRILLES…100 100 100

THIS MILLE

CLASSIC RL OXFORDS — ALSO LOVE THIS LINEN VARIATION

EMERSON FRY’S LUCY BLOUSE IN A SOLID OR PATTERN

AYR SHIRTS

& OTHER STORIES ALWAYS HAS GREAT ON-TREND PIECES FOR UNDER $100, LIKE THIS DENIM COLLARED STYLE

TORY TUNICS

For spiffy but polished summer shoes, I love my platform fishermen sandals, these woven loafers, Staud’s Pippa sandal, and Chanel ballerinas.

Q: Classic everyday staples.

A: Shared some favorite everyday staples here and here, but I will share that these are the items I own and reach for CONSTANTLY in my own closet…

J. CREW TEES IN WHITE, NAVY, AND BLACK

FREE PEOPLE CAMI TANKS

STRIPED LA LIGNE SWEATERS — IN WARMER MONTHS, I THROW AROUND MY SHOULDERS MORE FOR DECOR AND A TAD OF ADDED WARMTH

NAVY FISHERMAN SWEATER — MINE IS VERY OLD J. CREW BUT THIS IS SIMILAR; I WOULD TAKE A MEN’S SMALL BECAUSE I LIKE TO WEAR OVERSIZED WITH WHITE JEANS

RL OXFORDS

MY FAVORITE WHITE JEANS AND MID-WASH VINTAGE-STYLE JEANS

KULE MODERN LONG TEES

CASHMERE TEES

CHANEL FLATS

SUPERGAS

HERMES ORANS

Q: Cute raincoat for my toddler.

A: I love the ones from TBBC, Sal E Pimenta, Petit Bateau, Gap, and this Amazon steal. We’ve owned all of these!

Q: Affordable boys shorts for day camp that aren’t ugly.

A: These are great! I would pair with a little polo. More great camp finds for littles here and here.

Q: Comfortable staples for travel – flights, Paris, Croatia in August – that limit sun exposure.

A: OO fabulous! Maybe double down on the gauze trend — cool/airy but offers coverage! — with a set like this shirt with these shorts paired with your favorite trendy sneaks, leather slides, or espadrilles. I also love these linen sets (also come in pants variations) from Casa Raki — I would pair with espadrilles or leather slides. Or pair gauze pants or linen pants with some lightweight striped tees. A packable hat like this or this will also help! I feel like a Celine trio crossbody is the ideal accompaniment to this chic European travel vibe!

P.S. Travel essentials here.

Q: A more structured canvas bucket style hat.

A: Business and Pleasure has a great one — I own in this stripe. I also love the patterned ones from Lack of Color. This fringe-edged neutral is also a great versatile option. I prefer the bucket styles with a little bit of a longer brim — more feminine? — but J. Crew’s shorter-brimmed option has been super popular this season. H&M also has some inexpensive takes on this trend.

Q: A really loud, fun pair of shorts.

A: I love these by Juliet Dunn — currently 20% off! My sister owns some of Zimmermann’s floral ones and they are SO CHIC IRL. Love this. More great shorts here. This inexpensive pair from H&M is also super fun.