Ok, so can you wear a mini skirt after turning 40? 50? 60?
Short Answer - Yes, Yes, YES!
Long Answer -
Why not?
I recently came across an article about an online blogger who did her own mini experiment. She would ask friends, family, even strangers who wore a mini skirt or a mini dresses, why did they wear it?
And though the answers were varied, the root of the it all was how the outfit made them feel.
So, the answer to the question isn’t if you can, it’s how do you feel about it?
As an online store owner and a woman in her 30s, venturing into her own unique style, I simply love my mini skirts and dresses. They’re an extension of me. My friends, not so much, but I love the way I feel dressed in one. And that itself makes the outfits shine.
If you have a miniskirt that you love to wear, wear it. If you have a short dress you love to wear, wear it.
Now, of course, there are guidelines to help when choosing to wear a mini skirt or dress. Here are 3 helpful tips to consider:
Pick one area to accentuate, and if you’re wearing a mini skirt/mini dress, that’s it. Styling it with a high-neck top or sweater will elevate the look and make it not look like you’re going to a club.
Now understand I was talking about miniskirts/minidresses. There is a good rule of thumb to follow. Your skirt shouldn’t be shorter than the tips of your fingertips if your hands are at your sides.
Keep your heels short!
And lastly, have fun!
Let me know what you think! Rock on!
We make fewer dresses, less often—on purpose
We are a slower fashion, Christian clothing brand that makes and sells feminine dresses for woman looking to reclaim their God-given femininity.
We believe that being born a woman, you are inherently feminine. Life may tell you otherwise, but sometimes all we need is a reminder. And that reminder is as easy as seeing yourself as the woman you are.
Our dresses are exclusively available through preorder, often times making less than demand. So that we can focus on what really matters: making you look more feminine and feel pretty
Why Femininity Matters More Than Ever
A comment on one of my videos stopped me in my tracks recently.
I posted a video showcasing one of our styles, and the comment asked, Why the focus on femininity? Why the emphasis on it?
I had to sit with that for a while.
Because I understood the skepticism.
There's a version of the femininity conversation that feels performative.
The aesthetic. The expensive taste. The fixation on men and a lifestyle.
And then adding a layer of dark spirituality - feminine energy, how to awaken it, manifestation.
And if you're a Christian, what seemed good and light has a complicated perspective.
So I understand why someone would raise an eyebrow.
But when I responded to that comment, I shared the real reason we're obsessed with femininity. And it starts with my own story.
Growing up, I was insecure about my womanhood. I believed my worth was tied to what I produced — what I achieved, what I could show for myself. It was only after becoming a Christian, after God began to reveal that my femininity was never the problem, that I started to see clearly. The world's contortion of femininity and masculinity — that didn't catch God off guard. None of it surprised him.
But what I really wanted to drive home is this:
femininity matters now more than ever. And here's why.
For the sake of this conversation, let me define what I mean by femininity. I'm talking about the attributes, talents, and skills particular to womanhood — the things a woman possesses that are distinct, that are hers.
This matters because it reveals God's intentionality from the very beginning.
Genesis 1:27 tells us God created Adam and Eve in his likeness. The qualities we sometimes struggle with as women — the ones that make us feel inadequate, vulnerable, too soft — were not accidents. They were designed. Purposefully, by our Father. Not to make us a liability. To make us necessary.
When we look further into Genesis, we see that Adam was formed from dust and called to work the land. God looked at him and said: It is not good for man to be alone. I will make a helper for him.
He didn't create another man.
When God created Eve, he formed her from Adam's rib and brought her to him.
That imagery gives hint to the importance of womanhood.
The bible uses the word, helper, which does not mean a subservant.
Rather it carries the meaning of having strength, having skill, possessing something complementary that the other person does not have.
But here's what took my breath away.
That same word, helper, is used elsewhere in Scripture to describe God's relationship with Israel.
And used in the New Testament to describe the Holy Spirit.
Let that land for a second.
A woman is not helpless or defenseless, but she was created on purpose with gifts and talents unique to her - orchestrated by the Lord
That's not a small thing. That's everything.
When I embraced my womanhood, Scripture opened up to me in ways it hadn't before.
I started seeing Jesus differently — more richly, more personally.
The story that always gets me is the woman at the well. John 4.
I've heard it preached a hundred different ways. She's called immoral, obstinate, a cautionary tale. But when you read it as a woman, you see something else entirely.
She comes at high noon — seeking isolation.
She knew no one would be at the well.
She wasn't being practical. She was trying to hide, because that's all she knew. How to be invisible
And Jesus, the bible tells us, came to the well to meet her.
He asks her for water.
And by doing so, he offers a water much greater than anything she could experience.
WHat's so beautiful is that Jesus sees this woman fully...
I think it's the same way Jesus saw Nathaniel and said, I saw you under the fig tree.
It was a moment of being truly known, and fully loved.
And in that moment, that woman felt something. She goes from being invisible to telling the city about the man who sees her.
And the bible tells us that the whole city comes to Jesus because of her testimony.
That's what happens when a woman knows she is loved.
This Is Why We Do What We Do
Femininity matters to us because you matter. Not as a concept. Not as an aesthetic. As a woman, made on purpose, for this moment.
Our brand exists to remind you of that. If you're struggling with your womanhood — if some part of you resents being a woman, feels lesser for it, wishes you were built differently — I want you to hear this: God loved you enough to make you exactly this way. You bear his image. Whether you're soft or strong, whether you fit the mold or don't, you are loved by Jesus.
That's the whole thing. That's why femininity matters.
Looking for Christian women’s clothing that feels feminine, not frumpy? Discover the secret behind our classy mini dresses that honor your values and beauty.