Outdoor clothes
Every item is laid out in the hallway, yet it has to go on in the right order before the weather sours and the bus is already rolling. The visual support below shows the whole outfit in the sequence that actually works.

Outdoor clothing set
A display of outdoor clothing with a blue hooded jacket, green trousers, a red beanie with pompom, hiking boots, and a pair of grey gloves.
About this visual support
It is the order, not the garments, that usually trips things up. Socks after trousers turn into a struggle, the hat before the jacket squashes the hood, and a mitten ahead of the zipper stalls the whole effort. With the sequence visible on one row you avoid repeating spoken instructions between every step.
A visual support for outdoor clothes works as an executive overview: your child sees how many steps remain and which square is next, without having to hold the whole list in their head. That matters most in winter, when layer upon layer makes it easy to forget something in the middle and start over.
One concrete tip: lay the clothes out in the same order as the cards, from left to right on the floor or bench. Reality then matches the schedule and you do not have to point in two places at once. If you want to tie it to a short outdoor timer or a full morning routine, you can build the sequence in Routined and reuse it the next morning.