The Fashion Month Survival Kit That Works in Real Life Too

Proven picks for long days, nonstop travel, and any schedule that rivals the month’s chaos.

NYFW Essentials
(Image credit: Courtesy of Brands)

Fashion week is a study in extremes: early wake-up calls and midnight after-parties, endless traffic and lots of small talk, immaculate street-style looks and the inevitable blisters that come with said sartorial choices. After more than ten years on this circuit—first in New York, then expanding into a month-long journey through Milan and Paris—I’ve learned that fashion week isn’t just about clothes; it’s about survival. You can gauge the mood of the industry in black town cars outside the shows or among the bleary-eyed crowds at Café de Flore, and you can track the global fashion economy by the calendar's prime time slots, each claiming its spot as the season’s defining moment.

This season promises to be even more frenetic: a “freshman class” of designers—many of whom are women reshaping houses long defined by men—are making their debuts, ensuring front rows are fuller, schedules are busier, and expectations are higher. A crowded calendar demands strategy: footwear that can withstand twelve-hour days on your feet, outerwear that can handle the abrupt shift from late-summer humidity to early-fall, beauty products that make it look like you slept more than four hours, and a tech setup that keeps you connected. Some items evolve with the ever-changing trends and technology; others remain constants amid the chaotic pace.

These are not one-week novelties, but essentials that go beyond the "tents"—into any life where the schedule feels like fashion month, whether the sprint is from a Tribeca gallery show to a late-night dinner in Paris’s 3rd arrondissement, or just managing your daily rounds of meetings, errands, and obligations.

The Shoes That Don’t Quit

Shoes are the real power players at fashion week: ask anyone who’s limped out of a show at the end of the day or tried to walk across the Paris cobblestones in stilettos. This season, it's not worth risking discomfort for a new pair, no matter how tempting they look in the Net-a-Porter cart at 2 a.m. A low heel is perfect—kitten heels, once dismissed as '50s suburban style, now serve as an insider’s sign of polished elegance without the pain. Loafers and ballet flats continue to be the steadfast choice of editors who understand endurance, especially when paired with a sock (see: Miu Miu’s street-style dominance). And of course, a sleek sneaker in fall’s suede is proof that you’re both in on the trend and practical enough to make the decision that will thank you later.

Comfortable Shoes

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The Bag That Holds It Together

The handbag choice is the ultimate Goldilocks dilemma of fashion week: it can’t be so big that it feels like you’re hauling luggage through the front row, but it can’t be so tiny that you’re left juggling your phone, show notes, and a rogue granola bar. This is your mobile office, after all—you need a bag capable of stashing a laptop for filing in the back of an Uber, chargers to stave off the inevitable two percent low battery warning, and the sweater you swore you wouldn’t need until you did. We’ve seen the extremes—Jacquemus’s micro-minis that hold little more than a breath mint and the XXL totes that look better suited to a weekend getaway than a day at the office. The sweet spot is a structured, medium-size bag that feels considered but not precious, utilitarian but still show pony enough to hold its own.

The bags to wear for fashion week

(Image credit: Courtesy of brands)

The Outerwear That Makes the Entrance

Outerwear is where the whole look comes together—at fashion week, the coat isn’t just part of the outfit, it is the outfit. The tricky part is that the weather rarely cooperates: New York in early September can still feel like peak summer, while Paris and Milan in October flirt with crisp fall evenings that beg for layers. Having at least one or two great jackets in your arsenal takes the stress out of getting dressed; they do the heavy lifting when you’re too tired to strategize, and suddenly the rest of the outfit feels intentional, even if it was thrown together in five minutes. A sculptural trench, an oversized blazer, or a statement leather can transform whatever’s underneath into something that carries the day.

Coats to where to NYFW

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The Small Accessories That Save You

It’s always the smallest things that make the biggest difference during fashion week. Socks aren’t just about comfort—they’re a styling device when slipped into loafers or ballet flats. Sunglasses, meanwhile, serve triple duty: they shield you from the early-morning glare, add gravitas in the front row, and disguise a late night that stretched a bit too far. A sweater, tucked into your bag, functions as both an extra layer and a styling accessory, ready to be draped over shoulders or tied around the waist. And then there’s the scarf: a true multi-hyphenate that can be a belt, a head wrap, a twilly tied onto your bag, or the classic knot around your neck. They’re small, but they are the kinds of details that can shift an outfit from simply functional to fully considered.

accesories for NYFW

(Image credit: Courtesy of brands)

The Tech and Tonics

The extra bits and bobs are what keep you motivated when your schedule feels overwhelming. AirPods allow you to join a conference call while waiting for the first model to walk, and an external charger keeps your phone powered long after your energy dips. A stain-remover wipe can fix a spilled coffee on a white shirt, and vitamins—or just a quick electrolyte packet—help you get through another late-night dinner that turns into an early morning shift. Don't underestimate the power of a discreet (sometimes unglamorous) toolkit.

Extras for NYFW

(Image credit: Courtesy of Brands)
Sara Holzman
Style Director

Sara Holzman is the Style Director at Marie Claire, where she has worked in various roles to ensure the brand's fashion content continues to inform, inspire, and shape the conversation around fashion's ever-evolving landscape. A Missouri School of Journalism graduate, she previously held fashion posts at Condé Nast’s Lucky and Self and covered style and travel for Equinox’s Furthermore blog. Over a decade in the industry, she’s guided shoots with top photographers and stylists from concept to cover. Based in NYC, Sara spends off-duty hours running, browsing the farmer's market, making a roast chicken, and hanging with her husband, dog, and cat. Find her on Instagram at @sarajonewyork.