I don’t know if it was all the binging or if it was a slow burn. I don’t know if it was that glitzy Texas glamour . I don’t know if it was me looking for a new excuse to where a cowboy hat to work everyday or the way Tommy curses so good. Maybe it was a little of everything.
This is what I do know:
Landman gave me new wiring.
I’m not talking about putting on western costumes.
I’m not talking about “cowboy-core.”
I’m talking about “I’m not wearing anything I didn’t mean to wear” energy.
I’m talking about expensive-feeling, take-no-shit, self-assured (but still accessible) outfits when you’re wearing a t-shirt and some jeans.
I’m talking about Landman rewiring my dopamine to where my personal style is now.
This is no longer about the clothes being loud.
It’s about you being loud.
The Vibe (Let’s Skip Straight to the Clothes)
This is less about a “micro-trend” and more about an energy and an overall vibe.
This is the style of women who:
- don’t have to explain themselves
- always seem like they have somewhere to go
- can take a crisis in their stride
- can be trusted with a black dress (but don’t need one)
Think: oil-money minimalism.
Texas “don’t mess with me” confidence.
You-won’t-break-me, I-don’t-have-time-for-fuss attitude.
Dress Like the Version of You Who’s Not Panicking About the Future
New year style is typically framed as a shopping problem. New aesthetic. New wardrobe. New…
The Clothes
Ok, now we can talk about what you’re actually wearing.
If you’ve seen Landman, you know that there’s a through-line in the clothes. The women on Landman are not wearing novelty pieces. These are pieces that make everything else you wear seem like an extension of them.
So here’s what I can’t stop wearing after Landman rewired my style:
The Structured Denim Jacket
They aren’t oversized, casual, or baggy.
They aren’t boyfriend-jacket-chic.
These are lived-in denim jackets that you throw on as your off-switch, but also don’t look like you forgot to try.
Your Landman-coded jacket:
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The Jeans (Straight-Leg or Bootcut)
Skinny jeans are non-existent in this world.
It’s not a relaxed fit. It’s more like a crisp yet lived-in look that makes you feel grounded and “grown” in them. You really care about your cut and the length.
If your jeans aren’t these, they aren’t in this wardrobe.
A Real Belt (Visible On Purpose)
This is a big one.
It’s not decorative or dainty. It’s a belt that feels like an actual part of the outfit instead of an afterthought. You can go leather or fake leather, as long as it has the this-is-on-purpose feel.
Neutral Boots That Aren’t Trendy or Fussy
I’m not kidding you. Boots are everything here.
They are neutral, rugged, and perfectly on-trend without being “oh-my-god-trendy.”
Boot-level breakdown: these boots say “I have intention in my walk.”
A Clean Top with No “Look-at-Me” Feelings
Tank. Tee. Long-sleeve. Doesn’t matter.
It just has to fit like it was meant to fit you (and not you the other way around) and not try to take over the outfit. This style is less about layering chaos and more about curated simplicity.
How This Style Actually Looks IRL
This is my repeated outfit formula:
clean top + good jeans + belt + boots + crisp hap (for the drama) + sunglasses
Get it together:

Shop This Look
- no fuss
- no apology
- no trend anxiety
- no explanations
You don’t have to look like you’re trying to be seen.
You already are seen.
Why This Style Hits Right Now
I think culturally, we’re just done.
Done with the hyper-curated chaos.
Done with the nine-micro-trends-we-need-to-be-bothered-with-every-fucking-season noise.
We want clothes that make us feel anchored, stable, and confident. Clothes that say less “look at me” and more “I know who I am and I don’t need to prove it.”
And the truth is: you can only see this in hindsight—but that’s exactly where we’re going.
The Sparkle Takeaway
Watching Landman, I didn’t want to dress western.
I wanted to dress certain.
Certain of myself.
Certain of my choices.
Certain of my presence.
And you can’t go back to putting outfits together that don’t support that feeling.
It’s not about copying a show.
It’s about dressing like you own your life—quietly, confidently, and with no apology.












