Rehma sees what most people miss. In part two of this conversation, the stylist reads Kirti's wardrobe like a memoir — spotting the London blazers, the shift to free-flowing colour, the body that changed and the self that grew with it. They talk about styling through perimenopause without fighting your body, why modesty is built on cultural awareness, intentional styling and emotional wellbeing, and how to tell cultural appreciation from appropriation. Rehma shares why she wore black to stay invisible for thirteen years — and what made her finally choose colour. A conversation about clothes that turns out to be about acceptance, identity, and the quiet courage of letting yourself be seen.
00:00 Back with Rehma, part two01:01 Styling when your body changes01:35 Rehma's conversation with her own body03:35 Letting go of clothes that no longer fit05:34 Stop forcing your body06:14 Perimenopause as a season, not a problem08:25 Conservative London, vibrant Dubai09:39 Modesty is not a restriction10:24 The three pillars of modest fashion13:46 Appreciation or appropriation15:43 Wear it for yourself, not to fit in18:30 The boldest thing she ever wore20:32 The magic of colour21:11 Rehma reads Kirti's wardrobe24:00 One suitcase, two lipsticks29:23 Do we hide our journeys in our clothes?29:49 Thirteen years of wearing black33:13 Dressing to be seen34:14 What she'd tell her younger self35:16 The one thing she'd leave behind
Drop Your Noise — shortlisted for Podcast of the Year, Women in Business Awards 2025. Hosted by Kirti Daryanani.
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