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The
Clothing Chronicles
July 21, 2006, #236
FashionForRealWomen.com
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In This Issue:
Message
From Diana
Feature
Article: How Much Should You Be Spending On Clothes?
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MESSAGE FROM DIANA
Yep, I'm a day
behind this week. I'd like to claim the extreme heat for my tardiness
- too hot to do anything, it's not the heat it's the humidity kind of
thing - but basically, the week just got away from me. I've been
cranking out all sorts of things in anticipation of some time off in
August, and well, you know how that goes -
OCCASION MAGIC
is in a holding pattern at the moment, awaiting a new cover, and
should be available next week. My carpal tunnel is MUCH better
(thanks again for all the kind notes) and this little bit of extra
waiting has me adding a few other things. I'm at more than a hundred
"what to wear" scenarios at the moment, from what to wear
to a school play to what to wear to play the slots in Vegas (or Monte
Carlo - and yes, the requirements are different), to enable you to go
literally ANYWHERE you need to go with confidence. Weddings? Check.
Travel? Check. Religious ceremonies? Cultural events? Holidays and
family affairs? Check, check, and check. I can hardly wait for you to
see it. Be on the lookout for it early next week.
So what's on
tap for today's article? The answer to a question that frequently
hits my inbox: "How much money should I be spending on clothes?"
Enjoy!
Diana
diana@fashionforrealwomen.com
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|
 |
Like
to Shop?
So
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time to do it. Hectic schedules, no time to track things down - it
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Which
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days. From finding gifts to locating one-of-a-kind items, personal
shopping is BIG business - and not just for individuals, either. Many
businesses hire personal shoppers to help them find things too.
If
you like to shop and have an interest in this exciting industry,
grab a copy of Become
a Personal Shopper to see how fun, interesting, and profitable
shopping for others can be. Get pa^id to shop? Yep! It could be your
dream come true!
http://www.dianaprefers.com/books/shopping.html |
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FEATURE ARTICLE
How Much
Should You Be Spending On Clothes?
It's a
question that I receive from time-to-time from people trying to get a
handle on their clothing expenses. Whether you have a lot to spend or
a whole lot less than you'd like, there are a couple of ways to go
about figuring how much of your budget you should be allocating to clothes.
1. The
Historical Method
If you
typically keep track of all of your expenses by hand or by computer,
you can usually find this number with very little effort. Simply
tally the amount you've spent by year for the last few years and see
how they compare to each other.
If your
spending habits are pretty predictable, the amounts will probably be
similar for each year. If you've had a job change that impacted your
wardrobe requirements (got a promotion, went to uniforms, left Wall
Street to start a goat farm in Vermont)-or had a teenager enter or
exit your midst-you'll no doubt see the impact in your clothing
expense history.
Simply
determine how long the impact will be felt (from here on out, for
three more years, etc.) and adjust the rest of your budget
accordingly. If the number seems high or low in proportion to the
rest of your income and expenses, you may need to adjust your
spending habits to meet your business and image goals.
2. The
Percentage Method
For those of
you who don't typically keep records or who want a more definitive
answer, you may want to look at the percentage method.
The percentage
method is where you allocate a certain percentage of your income to
specific expenses. Because these can vary wildly depending on your
marital and dependent status, work environment, local cost of living,
etc., use these AS GUIDELINES for forming your budget, then adjust as
necessary for your particular situation:
Housing: 20-35%
Taxes: 15-35%
Food: 15-35%
Clothing: 3-10%
Transportation:
6-20%
Entertainment: 2-6%
Savings: 5-9%
Miscellaneous: varies
Now before you
use this as a permission slip of sorts to head to your favorite store
to spend 10% of this year's salary on clothes, there are a couple of
things you need to keep in mind:
1.
Your Lifestyle
If you wear a
uniform to work, work at home or in a casual environment, are retired
or are getting ready to retire, you can probably get by on a 3-5%
clothing budget (or less).
If you are
regularly photographed, are a public official, speak, consult, or
charge a lot of money for your products or services, you will need to
spend more on your wardrobe, typically 7-10%.
2.
The Needs of Each Dependent
If you are
married and raising children, you'll need to spread the budget
between everyone in the household. So as the number of bodies to
clothe goes up, the amount to spend per body goes down.
Now while your
teenager (or pre-teen) will no doubt argue that she should be
allocated the bulk of the budget to buy the status symbols of her
peer group, don't do it; the distribution should be based on each
person's lifestyle requirements. Look at the wage earners' needs
first, then work your way through each person in the family.
So if Dad does
computer programming for a hospital, for example, Mom sells diamonds
to socialites, Junior is heavily involved in sports, and little Susie
is the scholarly type who prefers books to friends, then the
allocation might goes as follows:
Make sense?
Determine the needs per person, then allocate accordingly.
Whatever you
do, don't scrimp on your own wardrobe to dress your kids "to the
nines." While this is common practice in a lot of families, it's
counterproductive: the most money goes for the clothes that are worn
the least and that have fleeting impact, while the least amount goes
for the clothes that are worn the longest and need to have the
greatest impact.
So knowing
that the more polished you are, the more money you make and the less
polished you are, the less money you make, don't sacrifice your own
image goals to buy expensive clothes for your kids that they'll
outgrow in six months. Instead, put your own needs as the wage earner
first, increase your income, and you'll have more money to spend on
clothes for everyone. Make sense?
3.
Your Existing Debt Load
Now this whole
spending plan assumes that you operate your household on a cash
basis, meaning NO DEBT. If you're carrying a lot of debt-or even a
little-beyond your mortgage or car note, then you need to reduce your
expenses to bare-bones minimum until you've satisfied your creditors first.
So if you're
still paying off last year's fall wardrobe or that spending spree you
went on after you broke up with Mr. Wrong, don't add to your strapped
finances by assuming that these spending percentages are etched in
stone. They're not. Spend low while you pound away at the debt, then
re-adjust as necessary once you're back in the black.
So what's the
bottom line?
If you commit
yourself to staying within your budget, you'll spend less, make wiser
clothing purchases, teach your kids how to handle money
appropriately, AND be able to sufficiently fund your retirement to
dress well for years to come.
So how much
money should you be spending on clothes?
Enough to help
you look good, feel good, boost your income, and meet your financial
goals. No more, no less.
**************
Until next time,
Diana Pemberton-Sikes
diana@fashionforrealwomen.com
http://www.FashionForRealWomen.com
http://www.FashionSavvy.com
http://www.WardrobeMagic.com
http://www.FashionJobReview.com
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Published by:
Top Drawer
Publications, LLC
256 S. College Ave.
Newark, DE
19711 USA
Copyright
© 2006 by Diana Pemberton-Sikes All rights reserved. |