Meet Bridgette
I'm Bridgette, a personal stylist who helps women reconnect with their identity through the way they dress.
After over a decade working across styling, editorial fashion, and personal development, I've seen one truth again and again — the way we dress is deeply connected to how we see ourselves and how confidently we show up in the world.
But here's what I've learned: you can't style your way to confidence from the outside in. Not really. Not in a way that lasts.
Somewhere along the way, most of us stopped dressing for who we are and started dressing for who we think we're supposed to be. For the job. For the relationship. For the version of ourselves we used to be, or the one we're scared we'll never become. We hide in fabric. We disappear into "safe." We build a closet full of clothes that fit our bodies but don't fit our truth.
I don't believe in style as decoration. I believe in style as remembering.
This is where energetics comes in. Your wardrobe isn't separate from your energy — it's an extension of it. Every outfit is a frequency. Every choice you make in the mirror is a quiet conversation with yourself about who you believe you are allowed to be. When that conversation is rooted in fear, comparison, or old stories, it shows — in the way you hold your shoulders, the way you walk into a room, the way you shrink instead of arrive. And when that conversation is rooted in truth? That shows too. That's the woman people can't stop looking at — not because of what she's wearing, but because of how she's inhabiting it.
My work lives at the intersection of these two worlds — the seen and the felt, the visible and the energetic. I help women do the deep identity work of asking who am I, really, underneath the roles and the noise — and then I translate that answer into a wardrobe, a presence, a way of moving through the world that actually feels like home.
Because identity work isn't a luxury. It's the foundation everything else is built on. You can't pour confidence into a closet that's still dressing your past. You can't step into your next chapter wearing the armor of the woman you've already outgrown. The transformation has to happen on the inside first — and then, beautifully, unmistakably, it shows up on the outside too.
This isn't about trends. It's not about more clothes, or the "right" clothes, or keeping up. It's about coming home to yourself — and letting the world see exactly who that woman is.
If you're ready to stop hiding and start showing up as all of you — I'm so glad you're here.