From Fashion to Identity: How Style Became My Work
- 3 hours ago
- 2 min read
I’ve always been drawn to fashion and style in a very instinctive way. As a child, I would organise fashion shows at home every Sunday, styling my brother and sister and turning our living room into a runway. During school breaks, I sketched bespoke evening gowns for my friends and handed them out in the queue before class. I didn’t have the language for it then, but I was already exploring identity through style.
That curiosity eventually became a professional path.
I went on to study Fashion Styling in Paris, followed by Fashion Management in New York City, where I began to understand the industry from both a creative and strategic perspective. Later, I worked as a stylist for ELLE Magazine, an experience that deepened my understanding of editorial styling, storytelling, and the power of visual identity in fashion.

But what stayed with me most throughout all of these experiences was not just the clothes or the trends. It was the women behind them. How they wanted to feel. How they wanted to be seen. And how often, style confusion was never really about clothing at all, but about identity, confidence, and life transition.
This is what eventually led me to create my work in personal styling and confidence coaching.
Today, through Elevated, I support women through 1:1 styling and wellbeing-led coaching. My work focuses on helping women reconnect with their personal style through colour analysis, wardrobe curation, and intentional key pieces that reflect who they are today, not who they were years ago.
I often work with women in leadership and busy professional roles who feel overwhelmed by their wardrobes, disconnected from their style, or simply too stretched to think about themselves. Together, we bring clarity back in a way that feels calm, practical, and aligned with real life.
Alongside my coaching work, I am also beginning a new chapter in education. From September, I will be teaching Psychology of Style and Identity at Hult Business School. This feels like a natural extension of my work, bridging fashion, identity, and human behaviour in a more academic setting.
Across everything I do, my approach remains the same. Style is not about becoming someone new. It is about understanding yourself more deeply and expressing that with ease and confidence.
I bring a blend of French perspective, editorial experience, and coaching insight into my work, but at its core, it is always about helping women feel like themselves again.
If you are at a point where your style no longer feels aligned with who you are, I offer online and in-person styling sessions across Hertfordshire and Greater London.




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