Every styling tool that came before Leonne had the same flaw: it didn't know what you owned. So it pitched you a "perfect outfit" full of things you'd have to buy. Useful for the shop. Useless for the morning.
The best stylist is the one who reads what's already in the closet.
How she works
You give her an occasion. "Rooftop dinner." "Gym to coffee." "Meeting with someone I want to impress, but lightly." She reads your closet, picks 3–5 pieces that work together, names the look, and gives you one sharp styling tip — French-tuck the shirt, cuff the trouser, swap to the gold studs.
Three looks from the same closet
- 01
Rooftop dinner → Soft Drop Sunset.
Cream knit, wide-leg trouser, slim brown belt. Tonal, relaxed, dinner-ready. Tip: half-tuck the knit on the side with the belt buckle.
- 02
Gym to coffee → Off-Duty Default.
Vintage tee, oversized hoodie tied at the waist, white trainers. Layered without looking like you're going to the gym. Tip: keep the hoodie sleeves loose, not bunched.
- 03
Lightly impress → Quiet Authority.
Charcoal crewneck, straight-leg jean, leather sneaker, no logo anywhere. The outfit that lets the person, not the clothes, do the talking. Tip: full-length jean break — no cuff, no crop.
Why this works
The same closet, three different occasions, three meaningfully different outfits. That's the whole bar. A stylist who restyles the same five pieces no matter what you ask is just a slideshow.