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Create a stylish new look for spring

Now's the time to ditch wardrobe downers that don't work

It might still be the dark days of winter, but when the first blossoms are adorning the trees and snowdrops are popping up in sheltered nooks, we start looking ahead to spring.

Let it inspire a fresh start for your wardrobe so you look stylish and modern. You’ll feel good when you look good.

Start in your closet. Weed out the clothes that are keeping you stuck in the fashion past, and replace them with something fresher.

Ditch these downers for sleek substitutes.

Yoga pants: There’s an unfortunate epidemic of yoga pants being worn as dress pants, but no one is fooled. The legs give it away: The fabric is too flimsy to look dressy. Quality wool, twill or polyester slacks look better, wear longer and do justice to a dressy top.

Old-man sneakers: Nothing dates your look faster than frumpy shoes. Lumpy sneakers that look like baked potatoes have to go. Athletic shoes have gone high-fashion for every age and budget, and nowadays are being worn fashionably with dressy clothes. Choose colourful kicks with an elegant shape. Give sneakers with neon, metallic or patterned accents a try.

Fuzzy boots: In Ugg boots and all the imitators, every woman looks as if she’s standing in a bucket. They make legs look shorter and thighs squatter. Instead, wear knee-high or mid-calf boots that flatter the feminine leg shape and give a sleek profile.

Ratty sweaters: It’s tempting to keep sweaters forever because they’re functional, but please don’t. If it’s extra bulky, full of moth holes or if it’s so short it rides up, a sweater is past its prime. Choose body-flattering thin knits and layer to add interest. Guys, make sure the shoulder seam sits on your shoulder so you don’t look sloppy.

Extreme platforms: Leave 15-centimetre platforms to the Housewives on TV. Towering stilettos are better seen than worn because they punish your feet (the phrase “fashion victim” comes to mind). And they don’t look elegant kicked off mid-event. Bring back comfortable, single-sole pumps that flatter girlish gams.

Humdrum jeans: Well-cut jeans are your wardrobe’s fountain of youth. The higher price of designer jeans pays for engineering that makes them flattering. Try, try again until you find your brand. Ditch low-rise jeans, which create a muffin top and constantly shimmy down off your butt. Your best bet: high-rise or mid-rise jeans in dark denim.

Polo and khakis: Guys, this boring uniform can go horribly wrong, especially if the pants are pleated and the shirt is baggy. Done wrong, it renders you invisible, fashionwise. Try a well-cut shirt with buttons and flat-front trousers that flatter your frame.

Leggings: If you’re an adult woman wearing leggings, you can’t help but look as if you forgot your pants, or gave up on the bottom half of your outfit. Instead, wear slim pants or jeans with stretch; they comfortably skim over your figure without showing every flaw — and you’ll look more dignified.

PEACHY KEEN FOR SPRING

Here’s a cheat sheet for upgrading your style.
Audit: Go to your closet and group together all the clothes you wear at least once a month. Those are keepers. Anything else is questionable and probably needs to go.
Purge: Trust that if you haven’t worn it in a while, you won’t. Either it doesn’t fit, the colour is wrong, or it’s just not for you. Pay it forward by giving it away. Or sell it.
Tailor: Set aside at least $20 to tailor new clothes. It saves money in the long run. Hemming and darting transform clothes so they are tailor-made for you and you’ll actually wear them. A $10 top you don’t wear is a waste of money, but with an alteration, it’ll look like a million.
Fit: Style demands fit. Pants that dig into your waist don’t fit; go up a size or two. Frayed hems look sloppy. A top you keep tucking in or pulling down isn’t your size either. The size tag is a starting point, but let your eyes tell you what fits.
Staff: Assemble your own style team. Find a tailor (every dry cleaner has one), a skilled bra fitter, a reliable cobbler, a fashion adviser and a store whose clothes you like. They’ll guide you.