What’s the first thing people remember about your family?
Not the vacation photos. Not the holiday cards. The vibe.
You know the one. That “What you talkin’ ‘bout, Willis?” energy. It’s loud.
It’s real. It’s unmistakable.
Most family style guides tell you to match. Or worse (coordinate) just enough to look like you tried. I hate that.
It feels forced. It kills personality. And it makes getting dressed a negotiation.
Whatutalkingboutwillistyle the Family isn’t about uniforms. It’s about shared language. Colors, silhouettes, accessories (that) let each person speak their truth while still sounding like the same family.
You want photos that don’t look staged. You want mornings that aren’t a battle. You want kids who actually like what they wear.
This works. I’ve done it. With actual humans.
Who argue about socks.
By the end, you’ll have three no-fluff strategies to build your own version. Fast, flexible, and totally yours.
What’s Your Family’s Real Vibe?
I started asking my kids what clothes they grabbed first on school mornings. Not what I thought they should wear. What they actually reached for.
You ever notice how your youngest wears socks with sandals. And refuses to change? That’s data.
Not a fashion crime.
Whatutalkingboutwillistyle the Family starts there: watching, not prescribing.
Ask everyone. Even the six-year-old. What colors make them smile.
What feels like home on their skin? What do you all do together most weeks? Hike?
Cook? Build Lego towers for three hours straight?
Don’t force consensus. Look for overlap. If half the family loves earth tones and the other half lives in navy, maybe neutral + one bold accent color is your thread.
Tape photos to cardboard. It’s not Pinterest-perfect. It’s yours.
Make a mood board. Cut out magazine pages. Screenshot Instagram posts.
This isn’t about matching outfits or banning stripes.
It’s about knowing why that worn-in denim jacket stays in rotation for three years.
Does it feel light? Safe? Like you?
Then it belongs.
Rules kill joy.
A shared feeling keeps things simple.
What’s one thing everyone in your house wears without being asked? Go look. I’ll wait.
Coordination Is Not Uniform
I hate matching outfits.
It screams “theme park photo op” not “real family.”
Coordination means everyone belongs in the same picture without looking like clones. Matching means you all wear the exact same shirt. Don’t do that.
I use a tight color palette (two) or three main colors plus white, black, and denim. That’s it. No more than four colors total.
More than that and it feels chaotic, not curated.
Stripes and florals work fine together (if) they share at least one color from your palette. A corduroy jacket with a silk scarf? Yes (if) both are navy or rust.
Texture adds depth. Pattern adds life. Color holds it together.
You don’t need identical tops. Try this: everyone wears blue jeans, but tops range from sage green to burnt orange to cream. Or one kid rocks a dinosaur tee in mustard yellow while Dad wears a mustard flannel.
Same color. Different energy.
Whatutalkingboutwillistyle the Family starts here. Not with sameness, but with rhythm. Let your kid wear their favorite band shirt (if) it fits the palette.
Let Grandma skip the jeans if she prefers a charcoal skirt. It still works.
Neutrals are your safety net. They buy you room to be bold elsewhere. And if someone refuses to cooperate?
Good. That’s how you know it’s real.
Comfort Is Non-Negotiable
I dress my kids for comfort first. Always.
If it itches, they’ll yank it off. If it’s tight, they’ll whine. If it’s stiff, they’ll freeze mid-sprint.
You know this.
Uncomfortable clothes ruin photos. They ruin moods. They ruin you.
Soft fabrics matter. Cotton. Linen.
Light knits. Nothing that feels like sandpaper or plastic.
Breathability matters more in summer. Warmth matters more in winter. But always pick what fits the day (not) just the Pinterest board.
Don’t buy clothes that pinch at the waist or scratch the neck. Don’t force a toddler into jeans with no stretch. It’s not cute.
It’s cruel.
Style and function aren’t enemies. A well-fitting romper lets them climb, nap, and spill juice without disaster.
Try everything on before the event. Not the night before. Not in the car.
At home. With shoes. With socks.
With real movement.
See how the sleeves ride up. Watch how the waistband digs in. Ask them: Does this feel okay? (They’ll tell you.
Loudly.)
You want photos where everyone looks relaxed. Not like hostages in their own outfits.
That’s why The Family Whatutalkingboutwillistyle works. It’s built on this idea.
Comfort isn’t optional. It’s the baseline. Everything else rides on it.
Accessories Are Your Secret Weapon

I throw on a plain sweater and jeans. Then I grab a red bandana. Suddenly I’m not just dressed.
I’m me.
Accessories let you say something without speaking. Hats. Scarves.
Jewelry. Shoes. Belts.
Hair clips. All of them scream personality. Slowly.
You don’t need matching outfits to look like a family. You need shared tones. A navy blazer + mustard scarf + tan loafers = same vibe, different voices.
One kid picks chunky wooden beads. Another grabs a velvet bow tie. Your partner wears that silver pendant every time.
You wear the same leopard-print belt for three years straight. (It’s held up better than my New Year’s resolutions.)
Accessories add color where it matters. That cobalt headband pops against a gray dress. Those gold hoops warm up an all-black outfit.
No need to buy new clothes. Just swap what’s on you.
They’re cheap updates. Fast fixes. Low-risk experiments.
Whatutalkingboutwillistyle the Family? It’s not about uniforms. It’s about showing up as yourself.
While still belonging.
A striped scarf ties your look together. So does a dad’s pocket square. So does a toddler’s glittery socks.
You already own half of what you need. Dig in your drawer. Try it tomorrow.
That belt you haven’t worn since 2022? Put it on with jeans. See what happens.
Make It Stick
I pick clothes the night before. You do too. We both hate morning chaos.
A capsule wardrobe cuts the noise. One core style. One color palette per person.
No more staring into the closet for ten minutes.
I plan outfits Sunday night. My kid picks two. We swap if something feels off.
It works.
Style check-ins? Every few weeks. Not a meeting.
Just “What’s feeling right? What’s not?” Tastes change. Bodies grow.
That’s fine.
This isn’t about perfection. It’s about ease. And yes (fun) counts.
Whatutalkingboutwillistyle the Family starts with showing up, not stressing out.
You’ll love how light it feels once it clicks. Try it for two weeks. See what sticks.
Then dive deeper into The Lifestyle Whatutalkingboutwillistyle.
Your Family Style Starts Now
I’ve shown you how to build a look that’s coordinated but never stiff. Comfort matters. Personality matters more.
You’re tired of choosing between matching outfits and letting everyone wear whatever they want. That tension? It’s pointless.
Whatutalkingboutwillistyle the Family solves it. Not with rules, but with rhythm.
Find your core vibe first. Not someone else’s. Yours.
Then layer in smart coordination. Then let each person add their own thing.
You don’t need perfection. You need momentum.
So grab one outfit idea today. Try it this weekend. See how it feels.
Notice how much easier it is to leave the house.
Notice how much more connected you feel.
Start now. Not next month. Not after you “figure it all out.”
Go pick that first piece. And wear it like you mean it.

Ask Michael Fullerstrat how they got into fashion events and runway highlights and you'll probably get a longer answer than you expected. The short version: Michael started doing it, got genuinely hooked, and at some point realized they had accumulated enough hard-won knowledge that it would be a waste not to share it. So they started writing.
What makes Michael worth reading is that they skips the obvious stuff. Nobody needs another surface-level take on Fashion Events and Runway Highlights, Wardrobe Essentials, Style Tips and Advice. What readers actually want is the nuance — the part that only becomes clear after you've made a few mistakes and figured out why. That's the territory Michael operates in. The writing is direct, occasionally blunt, and always built around what's actually true rather than what sounds good in an article. They has little patience for filler, which means they's pieces tend to be denser with real information than the average post on the same subject.
Michael doesn't write to impress anyone. They writes because they has things to say that they genuinely thinks people should hear. That motivation — basic as it sounds — produces something noticeably different from content written for clicks or word count. Readers pick up on it. The comments on Michael's work tend to reflect that.

