Blog — Trip Styler

Trip Styler Tutorial :: Build A Day

post-vacation down day[trip style = any]

Question: Do you push your vacation to the 55th moment taking a red-eye home {only leaving time for a cold, wake-me-up shower before work}, OR do you sacrifice a day and return 24 hours early to re-acclimate?

I've done both, but I find I'm a better, happier traveler---during AND after my trips---when I know I have at least a day of downtime when I get home. A day to catch up on life AND sleep before returning into the rat race pace.

When I don't leave a day, time compresses leaving little margin for error. If I don't sleep well in the hotel bed, too bad. If my flight is delayed, too bad. If I get sick while away, too bad. There's a lot of IFs in travel, and without a buffer day, these almost inevitable IFs can mean the difference between approaching the week on empty versus full {and aren't vacations supposed to refresh?}.

The idea of needing a vacation from a vacation is one that's often joked about post-travel. Depending on the trip style, sometimes we run ourselves so ragged, or can become so stressed with various travel situations we come home tired rather than teed up. To this end, I recently read an article in United Airlines' Hemisphere Magazine which noted that 24% of Americans need a vacation when they return from a family trip. I'm surprised this number isn't higher. On the flipside, I suspect the percentage would be lower if a few buffer days were built in.

What reinvigorated my build-a-day thought process was my return home from a one-way road trip in Southern USA. I had a blast, but because I was on assignment, I had zero downtime, so now I feel like a need a vacation {translation: sit on a secluded beach with a good read and spontaneously appearing mojitos}.

As I write this post on the flight home, I'm taking deep breaths knowing I didn't build a day to recover into my schedule. My bad.

Trip Styler Tip :: Plan a buffer day for all the sexy things in life: laundry, stocking up on healthy groceries, exercising, or whatever it is that'll make you approach the week with a sense of peace and balance. In my experience, a down day at home is an e-s-s-e-n-t-i-a-l part of the vacation experience. If you build it, your serenity will come.

Do you build a "home day" into your travels?

[photo by @tripstyler]

Fash-Packing :: Spring Into Denim

denim packing inspiration[trip style = any]

Having just returned from country western grand central, I'm a little cowboy and cowgirl curious. Looking back on the western emporiums I moseyed on into as I clippity-clopped between Tennessee and Texas, I'm kicking myself in the bee-hind for not buying a pair of cowboy boots to go with dresses and denim cutoffs this summer. I guess I'll just have to go back!

Speaking of denim, fashion's true blue is on my mind {and in my suitcase} more than ever, so when I saw these jean inspiration boards by Piperlime, I had to share them as spring and summer packing inspiration for y'all.

Denim never goes out of style. I got a pair of the most perfect Levi's on the planet---high-waisted and fitted with a slight stretch---in NYC a few years ago, which I'll likely take with me to the grave. Back to the present day, jeans or cutoffs {and usually a denim shirt too} make it into my suitcase on e-v-e-r-y trip style. What about you?

summer denim packing inspiration Trip Styler Tip :: Deconstructed denim is a spring and summer packing must.

More Fash-Packing The Winter-to-Spring T-Shirt 5 Rules for Polished Packing Travel Staple :: The White Shirt NOT Packing For An Overnight-cation Men's Travel Style :: Summer To Fall Packing Inspiration ***Want more travel style? See our regular Fashion Friday column.***

[photos via piperlime]

Spotlight :: Nashville

nashville[trip style = urban + sightseeing]

{Editor's Note: I'm on the last stop of a one-way road trip from Tennessee to Texas, starting in Nashville and wrapping in San Antonio. More on each of my stops in the weeks ahead. Today; Nashville!}

I found part of my soul in Nashville. Maybe it's the music; there are more musicians per capita than any other city in the world. Maybe it's the people; they seem to know a thing or two about balancing contemplation and cheer, there are lots of churches in Nashville AND just as many bars! Maybe it's the small town atmosphere; the entire place feels like a collection of neighbourhoods rather than a big city. All I know is the second I stepped off the plane, there was a bearded gent playing live music in the airport singing a soulful tune of his own creation. At that moment, before I even hit Nashville's streets, I knew I'd like it. And I did.

Here's where it's at in Music City USA:

Eat barista parlor barista parlor barista parlor food Barista Parlor

Mas Tacos Mas Tacos

rolf and daughters rolf and daughters food Rolf and Daughters

loveless cafe Loveless Cafe. Go for breakfast. They are a half-hour outside of town, and uber Southern--->they make over 7,000 biscuits per day!

Do hatch show print hatch show print posters Hatch Show Print. The oldest letterpress print shop in North America.

ryman auditorium ryman auditorium above Ryman Auditorium. The original Grand Ole Opry.

country music hall of fame Country Music Hall of Fame

cowboy shopping Trail West. Cowboy shopping!

nashville bike share B-cycle Bike Share

Stay hotton hotel Hutton Hotel

[photos taken by @tripstyler while a partial guest of Nashville (except hutton hotel via jetsetter)]