I've been living in this oversized cream linen shirt for the past few days and honestly, I'm not mad about it. There's something about the weight of the fabric, the way it drapes without clinging, that just makes getting dressed feel less like a decision and more like a relief.
This morning I threw it over a black crop top and some worn jeans, the kind of pairing that feels effortless once it's happening but takes a minute to land right. The shirt's big enough that I can tuck it or leave it loose depending on my mood, which means I'm basically wearing one piece of clothing that covers about four different versions of myself.
I think what gets me is the texture. Real linen has this slight rumple to it, this gentle imperfection that reads as intentional rather than sloppy. It wrinkles in a way that looks considered. The buttons are still ones I need to think about, but the overall effect is relaxed in a way that actually requires less effort than trying to look polished.
Later I switched into a crisp white version for a coffee run, pairing it with some beige linen pants and a leather belt to keep things grounded. Same fabric, different energy depending on what you're doing with it. That's the thing I'm realizing about having a few good pieces in a neutral palette, it's less about having a lot of options and more about understanding the small shifts that change how you feel moving through your day.