System

The four dimensions of every outfit

Every outfit decision can be reduced to four dimensions. Once you can name them, you can reason about why an outfit works — or why it doesn't.

Man in a black leather jacket, low-key editorial portrait.
Close-up of a tailored black blazer with structured shoulder.
Beige linen fabric texture, close-up of woven cloth.

Four dimensions

  • Dimension
    Formality

    A 7-step ladder from athletic to black tie. Every garment sits on one rung. Outfits work when all garments are within ±1 step.

  • Dimension
    Silhouette

    Fitted, regular, relaxed, oversized. Mix at most one loud silhouette per outfit; everything else stays regular.

  • Dimension
    Color temperature

    Warm, neutral, cool. Anchor your wardrobe to one temperature; the other two are accents only.

  • Dimension
    Layer

    Base, mid, outer, accessory. Outfits scale by adding layers, not by changing the base.

1 · Formality, mapped

The 7-step ladder is the spine of the system. Every garment in your wardrobe sits on one rung. The ±1 rule is the single biggest source of cohesive outfits.

Formality

Formality ladder

Every garment sits on one rung. Outfits work when all garments stay within ±1 step.

  1. Athletic
    Hoodie · joggers · trainers
  2. Casual
    Tee · denim · sneakers
  3. Smart Casual
    Oxford · chinos · loafers
  4. Business Casual
    Blazer · trousers · derbies
  5. Business
    Suit · dress shirt · oxfords
  6. Cocktail
    Dark suit · silk tie · leather
  7. Black Tie
    Tuxedo · bow tie · patent
±1 rule · keep all garments within one rung of each other

2 · Color, mapped

One temperature anchors the outfit. The other two appear only as accents. Most failed outfits split temperature across the largest surfaces.

Color temperature

Color temperature map

Anchor your wardrobe to one temperature. The other two are accents only.

Warm
Earthy, sunlit, soft contrast
  • Camel
  • Brown
  • Cream
  • Olive
Neutral
Structural anchors, every wardrobe
  • Black
  • White
  • Grey
  • Navy
Cool
Sharp, modern, high contrast
  • Blue
  • Charcoal
  • Steel
  • Dark green
Outfit recipe

One base · one neutral · one accent

  • Base
    ≈ 60%
    Largest area. Sets temperature for the outfit.
  • Neutral
    ≈ 30%
    Support color. Black, white, grey, or navy.
  • Accent
    ≈ 10%
    One small detail. Belt, pocket square, knit.

3 · An outfit, built

Five slots. One decision each. Repeat the formula across days, rotate one variable at a time.

Outfit builder

Outfit builder

Base + layer + shoes + accent. Each slot is one decision.

Smart casual · navy on grey · brown accent
  1. Outer layer
    Navy blazer
    Soft shoulder · half-canvas
  2. Top
    White oxford
    Cotton · regular
  3. Bottom
    Grey trousers
    Wool · straight
  4. Shoes
    Brown loafers
    Leather · penny
  5. Accent
    Tan belt
    Leather · 30 mm
Formula · one decision per slot, repeatable across days

The system is the vocabulary. The Method is how you apply it. The Guides are worked examples. Or check an outfit you already own against the ladder with the Formality Checker. For the editorial framework behind every page, see the Style Methodology.

Read deeper into the system

See the system applied.

Worked examples of outfits built from the four dimensions.

See Outfits