Are you spending 45 minutes getting dressed, only to land on an outfit that looks and feels just ok?

Your career, body and life have evolved.

Your wardrobe hasn’t.

And “good enough” isn’t cutting it anymore.

If getting dressed feels harder than it should, it’s not because you don’t have taste. It’s because your closet hasn’t caught up.

I create structured wardrobe relaunches and high-impact styling intensives designed to bring your style up to speed — so your clothes finally work as hard as you do.

After we work together, getting dressed as your coolest, hottest, best self is easy and meltdown-free.

NYC-based. Travel to you. Virtual.

 
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"Real style is never right or wrong. It's a matter of being yourself on purpose." 

— G. Bruce Boyer


ABOUT ME

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Woman looking at clothing rack
 

Gab Saper is a personal stylist and founder of Wardrobe Editor™️, a styling consultancy focused on empowering women to embrace their bodies and themselves through style. She’s part stylist, part emotional translator—known for helping clients untangle the mess of “shoulds” in their closet and figure out what actually feels like THEM.

Drawing on her experiences from fashion school and working in retail, media and tech; she brings an intuitive-meets-practical approach to style that works as hard as you do, for your real life.

Gab guides you to dress in a way that commands respect at work, turns every head at the restaurant and makes you the envy of every mom (or aunt!) on the playground – without sacrificing comfort or utility. 

One of the ways she does this is by flipping typical style advice on its head. She’ll never advise clients to keep up with trends and she believes deeply that horizontal stripes are for everyone. Her process isn’t about perfection, it’s about building a wardrobe that saves you time and energy, reflects who you actually are and feels damn good to wear.

Gab lives in Greenwich Village with her husband and children…and by children, she means handbags. Some of her favorite things include an empty inbox, spicy margaritas and laughing out loud to a podcast. She was once featured in The New York Times for her very tiny, very organized apartment—proof that she lives what she teaches: edit ruthlessly, wear joyfully.