Looking for Style? Fashion Blogger Says Head to Walmart

Pennychic.com

Twenty-five-year-old Los Angeles-based stylist Shauna Miller has been featured in The Los Angeles Times, CNN, Good Morning America, Glamour, PerezHilton.com, and a slew of other major media outlets.

Not bad for a blog she started just eight months ago. Her secret? PennyChic.com shows readers how to put together stylish outfits at Walmart. According to Miller, we’re in a golden age for discount clothes shopping.

“Fashion 2.0, fashion right now, is about styling — which is great for people on a budget,” she says. “There’s nothing creative or cool about strutting down the street in all Prada anymore. It’s about mixing and matching. When I was in middle school, everyone wanted to be a fashion designer and now everyone wants to be a stylist. There’s something so creative about curating an outfit.”

(LIST: Top 10 Most Spectacular Beach Homes)

But seriously. Walmart? Buying clothes at Walmart? Miller says it’s actually not as bad as you think.

“I would say there’s really no difference between the quality of the stuff at Walmart and the quality of the stuff at H&M,” she says. “The quality between the middle- and the low- is very much the same.”

Of course, clothing from the top designers is of superior quality; but if you can’t afford that, according to Miller, you’re better off heading to discount stores. A few of her tips:

1. Use your imagination. One of the hardest things about shopping at Walmart is that there is almost no merchandising. Everything’s on pallets, there are no mannequins, the lighting is awful, and you’ll never see a glossy ad featuring a hot model in Walmart clothing. “When you’re going into Walmart or Kmart, try to imagine the item outside of the store,” she says. “Imagine it in your room, on you, with the coolest jewelry you have.”

(LIST: Top 10 Personal Finance Books)

2. Bigger is Better. When you’re putting together a look with discount store clothes, going with a baggier fit than you might normally seek is often a good idea. “Sometimes when you wear clothes that have low-end design and you wear them really right, the quality isn’t good,” she says. “So buying clothes bigger and using belts and kind of tying things is a good idea.”

3. Accessorize. “I think if you have the opportunity to buy something and you’re on a budget, the best thing to go with is accessories,” she says. “Instead of wearing one chunky bead necklace, wear five of them. It really gives you a focal point and a pop to the outfit.”

Related Topics: clothes, Clothes at Walmart, fashion, Fashion Blog, shopping, Style, Walmart Shopping, Saving & Spending, Smart Spending
  • Latest on Moneyland

    This Free Pizza Offer is Being Criticized as Discrimination

    When retailers and restaurants offer freebies, the point is to draw attention—not controversy. The only reason to protest 7-Eleven for giving out free Slurpees or Haagen-Dazs for dishing out free ice cream cones might be that the complimentary serving sizes are too small. But what do you expect when you’re paying $0? Now, though, a Texas-based pizza chain is drawing heat over its upcoming giveaway—in which pizza is free only to customers who order in Spanish.

    America's Uneven Economic Recovery: The 10 Best and 10 Worst CitiesDaily Finance

    Mark Viker / Getty Images

    The Fee That Credit Card Issuers Are Leaving Behind

    Banks, the thinking goes, have never met a fee they didn’t like. Yet one credit card charge that has been standard for years—the “foreign transaction” or “foreign currency” fee, which tacks on an extra 3% or so to every hotel stay, meal, or tchotchke purchased outside the U.S.—is slowly but surely being dropped by more and more card issuers. Why?

blog comments powered by Disqus