Dry off
Terry cloth on wet skin can tickle, scratch or just feel odd, yet drying off is what stops the chill once the shower stops. The pictures below keep this step in the chain instead of letting it get skipped.

Shower towel
A blue towel hangs on a towel rack with water drops around it.
About this visual support
Drying off is the sensory detail that most often slips out of the sequence. Water is still dripping, the floor is wet, and the gap between shower and clothes is filled by a thin towel pressed against skin that does not really want to be touched. Many children pull the towel across their shoulders once, declare themselves dry, and walk off while the back and legs are still wet.
Giving the towel its own picture puts the step back into the chain. You can show different zones — hair, back, legs, between the toes — so the whole body gets covered in order without it turning into a lecture. For a child who finds terry cloth scratchy, a softer towel or smaller sections at a time can change everything, and the image reminds you not to skip the less obvious spots like under the arms.
A simple idea: turn the towel picture into a small pause where you count three body parts together before clothes appear. Drying then becomes a step in itself, not a passageway. In Routined you can add this step with a short timer, so the time for drying gets its own visible slot.