Clothes

#clothes#dressing#garments#outfit#getting dressed

The label scratches the neck, the sock seam sits wrong, and yesterday's jumper suddenly feels off today. Choosing clothes starts on the skin as much as in the wardrobe. The visual support below helps you sort it out together.

A collection of clothes including a jacket, t-shirt, pants, a sock, and a shoe, neatly arranged.

Clothes

A collection of clothes including a jacket, t-shirt, pants, a sock, and a shoe, neatly arranged.

Various items of clothing including a dress, pants, a t-shirt, a hoodie, and a sweater hanging on a clothesline.

Clothes on clothesline

Various items of clothing including a dress, pants, a t-shirt, a hoodie, and a sweater hanging on a clothesline.

A striped t-shirt on a hanger, a blue polo shirt, a stack of folded clothes, jeans, and a yellow hoodie on a hanger.

Folded and hanging clothes

A striped t-shirt on a hanger, a blue polo shirt, a stack of folded clothes, jeans, and a yellow hoodie on a hanger.

A selection of clothes including a red t-shirt, blue jeans, a yellow sweater, and purple socks.

Clothes

A selection of clothes including a red t-shirt, blue jeans, a yellow sweater, and purple socks.

A stack of folded clothes, including a blue shirt and a green shirt.

Clothes

A stack of folded clothes, including a blue shirt and a green shirt.

Illustration of various clothing items including a pair of jeans, folded shirts, a dress, a t-shirt on hangers, and a pair of socks.

Clothes

Illustration of various clothing items including a pair of jeans, folded shirts, a dress, a t-shirt on hangers, and a pair of socks.

About this visual support

When every seam and label registers as strongly as the colour of the shirt, getting dressed turns into a puzzle with many pieces. Add a weather forecast that calls for something different than what felt fine yesterday, and the decision feels heavy before the day has even started. Visual support for clothes does two things at once: it shows which garments are available, and it ties certain combinations to certain weather.

With the cards in front of you, sorting becomes physical. One pile for what feels soft and comfortable, another for what suits today's temperature. Less talking, more quiet decisions – your child points, you nod, the garment comes out. For children sensitive to textures, that can be the difference between a tearful morning and one that simply flows.

A practical idea: lay out two outfits the evening before and photograph them. In the morning your child only has to point at the picture. No standing in front of an open wardrobe when tiredness is at its worst. To build the whole morning as a sequence of images, the Routined app lets you place the clothes step inside a longer routine.