Closet Clean Out Step 5: Simplifying Accessories And Storage

Organizing Accessories: The Finishing Touches That Make the Outfit

True fashionista style is never complete without the finishing touches — and disorganized accessories can be just as frustrating as disorganized clothing. This step is all about organizing accessories in the same way you organized your clothing.

You can have a beautifully edited closet, a smart buying list, and fresh outfit combinations… but if your shoes are piled in a heap or your necklaces are tangled together, getting dressed will still feel stressful.

Step Five of our Closet Clean Out Challenge is all about bringing order to the details.

Let’s jump in.


👢 Shoes: Group, Evaluate, Simplify

Start by grouping your shoes by category:

  • Tall boots
  • Booties (shoe boots)
  • Heels
  • Casual / sporty
  • Flats

If you live in Wyoming like we do, separating summer and winter shoes makes getting dressed much easier. I use:

  • Shelves for winter boots
  • A cubby organizer for summer styles

Other great options:

  • Labeled shoe boxes
  • Clear plastic containers
  • Over-the-door organizers
  • Off-season bins for storage

Pro Tip:

As you organize, evaluate condition.

Ask yourself:

  • How is the tread?
  • Are they scuffed or worn?
  • Are they outdated?
  • Do I actually wear them?

Create a trash pile and a donation pile.
If you eliminate something you truly need to replace, write it on your buying list.

When you’re finished, take stock:
Are you overstocked in one category but missing another?
Do your colored shoes align with your best colors?

If you’re an Autumn, bright cherry red heels may not coordinate with much in your wardrobe, but a deep wine tone probably will. Accessories should support your palette — not compete with it.


📿 Necklaces & Jewelry: Length + Color

For necklaces, organize by:

  • Length (shortest to longest)
  • Color grouping

I use a multi-pronged hanger in my closet and arrange them from shortest to longest, grouping similar tones together. It makes layering easier and eliminates the “I forgot I owned that” problem.

Earrings work best in a jewelry box with small compartments. I separate:

  • Everyday pieces
  • Dressier styles

During this step, ask:

  • Have I worn this in the past year?
  • Does this reflect my current style?
  • Does it coordinate with what I actually wear now?

👜 Handbags: Cohesion Matters

Handbags should support your wardrobe — not fight it.

I arrange mine on shelves by color, primarily:

  • Black
  • Brown
  • Tan
  • Gray

Smaller bags and wallets go in baskets (which work well under hanging clothes if shelving is limited).

Pro Tip:

Apply your best color principles here too.

If a handbag doesn’t coordinate with your palette, it will rarely get used. Avoid the “hot pink purse with a red coat and olive pants” situation by editing strategically.


🧣 Scarves & Wraps: Contain the Chaos

Scarves are beautiful — and chaotic if not contained.

I recommend:

  • Rolling them into small circles
  • Storing them in a drawer
  • Keeping outdoor scarves separate from fashion scarves

If drawer space is limited, a slim under-bed basket works beautifully. Avoid stacking too high — especially when you’re searching at 6 a.m.

Wraps can be folded with sweaters on your top shelf.


The Bigger Picture

Accessories are not an afterthought.
They are the polish.

When your accessories are organized:

  • You see what you have.
  • You use more of it.
  • You avoid unnecessary purchases.
  • You feel more pulled together.

One More Game-Changer

While we’re talking about organization…

Planning your outfit the night before can completely change your mornings.

Before bed:

  • Choose your outfit
  • Select shoes
  • Pick jewelry
  • Switch handbags if needed
  • Set out the appropriate coat

Those few extra minutes eliminate stress and build confidence.

And feeling put together?
That’s worth it.


🎥 Watch Step Five

My Step Five Live Video aired inside our VIP Facebook Group.
Join the group to watch the replay and see the full walkthrough.

This entire Closet Clean Out Challenge series will also be released on YouTube next Wednesday.

If you’ve made it this far — congratulations.
You didn’t just clean your closet.

You built a wardrobe system.

Closet Clean Out Step Four – Building New Outfits From What You Already Own

A woman leaning against a table looking at her phone

Building New Outfits From What You Already Own

One of the most surprising moments in a closet clean out often happens after the hard work is done.

You open your newly organized closet…
…and suddenly, outfits start revealing themselves.

This is not accidental.

If you completed the earlier steps of the Closet Clean Out Challenge — organizing by type, color, and thoughtfully letting go — you’ve already laid the groundwork for building new outfits without buying a single thing.

This week’s focus is all about learning how to see your closet differently.


Why Color Organization Changes Everything

When your clothing is grouped by color, patterns emerge.

You start noticing:

  • Colors you gravitate toward
  • Colors you own plenty of but rarely wear together
  • Unexpected pairings you’ve never tried

Color organization removes the guesswork. Instead of pulling one piece at a time, you’re able to see relationships between garments — which is the foundation of outfit building.

Most of us are very comfortable pairing neutrals:
black, navy, grey, white, tan.

Where confidence tends to drop is when we move beyond neutrals.

That’s where color theory becomes incredibly helpful.


Using Color Theory to Create New Looks

Here’s a guiding principle I share often:

If two colors appear together in a print, they can be worn together in an outfit.

Designers have already done the work for you.

Look at your printed pieces — blouses, skirts, scarves, dresses. If a print includes navy and lavender, or rust and periwinkle, or burgundy and brown, those colors are already proven to be complementary.

Some color combinations that often surprise people:

  • Olive green and navy (especially when the olive has a blue undertone)
  • Chocolate brown and navy
  • Rust and periwinkle
  • Coral and magenta
  • Turquoise and olive
  • Plum and navy
  • Burgundy and brown

Printed items act as anchors. They give your eye a resting place and allow you to build the rest of the outfit with confidence.


A Simple Rule for Color Pairing

To keep outfits looking intentional (not chaotic), I follow a very simple rule:

Limit your outfit to no more than two main colors.

You can mix:

  • Shades of the same color
  • Lighter and darker versions of one hue

For example:

  • A plum top with navy slacks works
  • Adding periwinkle as a third dominant color does not

However, accents are different.

You can introduce a third color through:

  • Jewelry
  • Scarves
  • Shoes
  • Handbags

This keeps outfits polished instead of busy.


Understanding Warm vs. Cool Colors (Without Overthinking It)

One of the most helpful tools when pairing color is knowing whether a color leans warm or cool.

Here’s a simplified way to think about it:

Cool-toned colors tend to have:

  • Blue, grey, or violet undertones
    Examples: navy, charcoal, cobalt, plum, true white, icy pink

Warm-toned colors tend to have:

  • Yellow, orange, or red undertones
    Examples: camel, rust, mustard, olive, coral, warm brown

When building outfits:

  • Try to keep warm colors together
  • Try to keep cool colors together

That’s why olive (with a blue undertone) pairs beautifully with navy — they’re both cool-leaning.

If something feels “off,” it’s often because a warm and cool tone are fighting each other.


How Prints Allow You to “Break the Rules”

Prints give you permission to stretch beyond two colors — as long as the print is the hero.

For example:

  • A printed blouse with navy and lavender can be paired with navy slacks and a lavender cardigan
  • A printed pant with magenta, mustard, and black can be styled with a magenta top and black blazer

The key is this:

Let the print lead. Everything else supports it.


Using Color to Refresh Familiar Pieces

Another favorite strategy of mine is building outfits around a single color family and then adding contrast through a layering piece.

For example:

  • Dark grey slacks + light grey blazer
  • Add a magenta or berry-toned tank underneath
  • Finish with coordinating jewelry

The base stays cohesive. The accent brings the interest.

This is one of the easiest ways to make outfits feel fresh without buying more clothing.


What’s Next

If this step has helped you see your closet with new eyes, you’re doing it right.

Next week, we’ll build on this foundation by talking about accessories — and how changing jewelry, scarves, and shoes can completely transform outfits you already own.

Sometimes the most powerful wardrobe updates don’t come from shopping…
they come from learning how to use what you have.

If you’d like to watch this week’s lesson in full, the Wednesday Wardrobing replay is available in our VIP Facebook Group, where we walk through these concepts visually and answer questions live.

You’re closer to a closet that truly works than you think 💛

Kyleen