Sunday, 12 April 2026

Clothes Minded: Fashionable Essays About Finding Yourself by Christine Morrison


Clothes Minded: Fashionable Essays About Finding Yourself Paperback – December 4, 2025

by Christine Morrison (Author)

 

What do our clothes say about who we are — andwho we’re striving tobe?

 

In Clothes Minded: Fashionable Essays About Finding Yourself, renowned journalist Christine Morrison weaves together fashion, memory and identity in a collection that’s as emotionally resonant as it is sharply observed. With savvy and self-awareness, she explores how we use clothing not just to show up in the world, but to shape, survive, and sometimes, escape it. Growing up inspired by fashion magazines and The Official Preppy Handbook, Morrison worked in advertising and led in an executive role at Calvin Klein before reinventing herself as a writer for iconic fashion and beauty brands. She brings a rare blend of industry insight and personal vulnerability as she shares her journey through love, loss, marriage, motherhood, and the ongoing process of figuring out who she really is beneath the clothes.

 

Morrison also turns the lens outward, sharing candid reflections and style takeaways from some of fashion and beauty’s most respected voices—stylists, designers, founders, and creatives who know how personal style can shape a life, including Sarah Clary, April Gargiulo, Daryl K, Roz Kaur, Nikki Kule, Joyce Lee, Stacy London, Megan Papay, Meg Strachan, April Uchitel, Tiffany Wendel, and Meg Younger.

 

Whether you’re standing in front of your closet trying to figure out what to wear or wondering how our outfits tell our stories, look to Clothes Minded for a warm, funny, and deeply honest exploration of the layers we put on—and the people we keep discovering underneath.


Clothes Minded: Fashionable Essays About Finding Yourself by Christine Morrison

Clothes Minded: Fashionable Essays About Finding Yourself is a collection of personal essays by Christine Morrison, a former Calvin Klein executive and journalist. Published in December 2025, the book explores the intersection of fashion, memory, and identity, illustrating how clothing choices shape self-discovery.

 

Book Overview

Themes: The essays follow Morrison's life from the 1990s to the present, using her wardrobe as a "map" to navigate milestones like career changes, marriage, motherhood, and aging.

Structure: In addition to Morrison's personal stories, the book features an epilogue titled "Famous Last Words," which includes style reflections from fashion industry leaders such as Sarah Clary, Stacy London, and Joyce Lee.

Format: It is available in paperback and eBook formats, typically spanning approximately 218 pages.

 

About the Author

Christine Morrison is the creator of writing in black and white, a Substack newsletter focused on fashion and beauty through the lens of aging. Her professional background includes serving as a Vice President at Calvin Klein, and her journalistic work has appeared in The Washington Post and The Boston Globe.

 

Availability

You can find the book at several major retailers:

Amazon

Barnes & Noble

Bookshop.org



The Making of a Designer.

Joyce Lee’s Instinctual Rise to Creative Director

 

Christine Morrison

Apr 08, 2026

https://writinginblackandwhite.substack.com/p/the-making-of-a-designer

 

The ethos of Clothes Minded: Fashionable Essays About Finding Yourself is that fashion isn’t just an aesthetic choice. It reveals who we are and who we’re becoming. Over time, the pieces we’re drawn to—and experiment with—begin to carry meaning, quietly documenting our growth and shaping our identity.

 

For creative director Joyce Lee, those early sparks of curiosity and instinct set the course for a career defined by ingenuity, determination and a love for detail. I’m honored to feature her in the Clothes Minded Epilogue, aptly titled Famous Last Words, among voices of trailblazers in fashion and beauty reflecting on how discovering personal style shaped their lives. Joyce’s story is one of many featured in the book, which explores the powerful ways fashion influences who we are and who we aspire to be. Her story stayed with me — as it will with you:

 

What I love about Joyce’s story is how clearly it illustrates something from our own journeys: the things we’re drawn to when we’re young are rarely random. As Joyce has earned her place in fashion design after decades of work, I was curious about the role shoes play in her life today:

 

How do the pieces you gravitate toward today reflect who you’ve become — as a mother, as a full-time creative director?

 

These days I’m really drawn to pieces that feel thoughtful and well made. I care a lot about quality materials, good construction, and designs that can move with me throughout the day. My life has a lot of different parts now, so I like things that are versatile but still feel special.

 

I tend to gravitate toward clean lines, but I always want a little something extra. A detail, a proportion, or a subtle twist that gives it personality. That’s very much how I approach my work too, whether it’s for my brands or how I think about my Substack. It’s all filtered through the same lens.

 

Becoming a mom has definitely made me more intentional. I don’t want a lot of things, I just want the right things. Pieces that last, that feel good, and that really reflect who I am.

 

For Joyce Lee, it’s always been about the details.

In your early years, shoes felt like freedom, as much as freedom of expression. What do they represent to you now?

 

They still feel like freedom, just in a different way.

 

When I was younger, it was more about imagining what I could do, and who I could be. Shoes felt like a way to step into different versions of myself. Now it feels more grounded. It’s less about becoming and more about being.

 

Shoes still have that transformative quality, but now they’re supporting my real life. Running between things, traveling, working, being a mom. They have to function, but they also still carry that sense of identity.

 

I also think shoes hold a lot of memories. I can look at certain pairs and immediately remember a moment or a phase of my life. So they still represent freedom, but now it’s more about feeling comfortable and confident in who I already am.

 

How does someone who once made shoes out of soda rings think about the meaning of getting dressed now?

 

I think that mindset is still very much a part of me.

 

Making those jelly shoes was really just me trying to solve a problem in a creative way. I wanted something but couldn’t have it, so I figured out my own version. I still approach getting dressed like that.

 

It’s not always about having the perfect piece. It’s about seeing what you have and making it work in a way that feels like you. Sometimes that means investing in something beautiful that you’ll keep for a long time. Other times it’s about how you style it or make it your own.

 

I’ve always believed that personal style is something you build over time. It’s not handed to you. Getting dressed is still one of the ways I express that every day, just a little more refined now.

 

I couldn’t agree more. As I wrote in the last chapter of Clothes Minded:

 

My looks are a visual diary of every version of myself. And just a glance in my closet reveals how I’ve matured. I no longer need to seek attention; I am visible to those who matter. I don’t demand perfection. I celebrate presence. I don’t believe in “the one that got away”—not a boyfriend, a job or a blazer. I am exactly where I am meant to be, wearing what belongs on me.

 

Eleanor Roosevelt once said, “Happiness is not a goal; it’s a by-product of a life well lived.” The same goes for our style—it naturally emerges when we’re honest about who we are and the life we want to lead.