This year Paris was everything about the wide leg trouser in lady-like shades of camel, fawn and slate grey. London re-ignited our current desire for everything utility – but as of this year’s Milan Fashion Week there have been one two surprises around the runway that saw designers, journalists and celebrities removing their shades and buying their pencils.

Traditionally the autumn/winter season colour story is about a darker base palette. Think black, grey and chocolate brown and you’ll be pretty confident that you’re on the profit the fashion stakes. Think again. This year at Milan we got probably the most vivid colours ever witnessed about the runway without notice of the year. Hot pink, vibrant teal and rich purple all include a loud and proud appearance as models strutted their stuff for Prada, Dolce & Gabbana and Jil Sander to mention just a couple of.

Now we aren’t suggesting you rush out and get a head to feet canary yellow two piece suit or perhaps a therapist uniform in fluorescent orange, however, if a trend this big starts it’s impossible to ignore and we’d stake our reputation around the idea that brights will be one of this winter’s big hitters. And of course, like a beauty professional you need to consider what’s happening on the runway before you choose your new therapist uniform.
Bright colour is really a surprisingly easy trend to utilize and a lot less scary than it looks.

There’s only really one golden rule to check out; when your colour pattern are these claims bright keep the cut of your therapist uniform classic and. Think about the asymmetrical tunic – slimming at the waist having a strong, structured neckline. It creates a sleek silhouette which is the perfect base for the bold shade. Wear it with slim fitting trousers or even a smart skirt for any look that’s classic and bang on trend in the same time.

Wearing bright colours is about confidence. If you feel sure that the shade and type of your therapist tunic befits you perfectly you’ll be able to carry off essentially the most vibrant shades. And don’t feel you have to follow any trend as being a slave, (in fact what looks wonderful with a model could be an extremely different thing when a mere mortal efforts to carry it off!) So consider accent colours on your therapist uniform; a black beauty tunic having a hot pink trim is on-trend and incredibly wearable.

You could even try wearing a solid colour at the top with black trousers or possibly a skirt – although following your mouth-watering shades we had at Milan Fashion Week and we don’t think we’ll ever wear black again.