For her 13th birthday, when most people were asking for Game Boys, trampolines, Nintendos, roller skates—Jaime asked for a Prada backpack and a TAG Heuer watch.
For her 16th birthday, she got a Cartier bracelet.
Jaime has a degree in economics and political geography. But her real education came from living in the world of luxury—not as an outsider studying it, but as someone who grew up speaking the language.
She doesn’t just talk to clients about outgrowing their wardrobe. She outgrew her family.
And here’s what she learned: Once you level up in luxury, there’s no turning back. You can lose access to it, but you can’t unsee quality. You can’t unknow the difference between investment and imitation. You can’t unlearn what it feels like to own something that actually reflects who you are.
She inherited a 50-piece collection: 30 pieces of Chanel, the others Bottega Veneta. She left her job at LVMH with 50+ pieces from their empire—Louis Vuitton, Moët Hennessy, Dior, Givenchy, Celine, Loro Piana, Tiffany, TAG Heuer, Marc Jacobs.
So what did she do?
She sold it all and started over.
Because she was going to do it her way. Not with hand-me-downs. Not with employee discounts. She created her collection piece by piece—each one chosen because she loved it and it represented her style.
Shopping wasn’t a skill she learned—it was a language she grew up speaking. Quality wasn’t something she studied. It was something she understood inherently. The difference between investment and impulse. Between what lasts and what’s just expensive.
She worked in operations at LVMH. She learned leather goods inside and out. She became an expert at identifying quality, construction, and value.
But she spent 15 years watching a pattern: women with serious money buying beautiful things they’d never wear. Closets full of investment pieces that never left the hanger.
The problem was never the clothes. It was the relationship.
She was always the one people wanted help from—even though she wasn’t selling. Why? Because she knew how to listen. She knew how to pick up on frustrations and insecurities. She could put herself in their shoes and figure out what would make them happy and comfortable.
And she educated people. Luxury can be intimidating. It doesn’t have to be. At the end of the day, it’s two pieces of leather that you carry your things around in.
But the two best pieces of leather that were ever made.
When you come from a luxury background, you have the confidence that you fit in.
Because you know the rules. There’s nothing you couldn’t wear anywhere. You could make it work. You own it in a different way. You have to have a certain air about you—like you belong there.
And that’s something a lot of women—even incredibly successful ones—struggle with.
Jaime has spent 35 years shopping. For herself, for clients, for people who know quality but don’t know what they need. She’s seen every mistake. She’s made most of them.
Now she fixes them.
She works with two types of women:
Women who’ve leveled up—professionally, financially, socially—but whose wardrobes haven’t caught up. Women who have the access but still don’t feel like they belong in the room.
And women who are already there. Women who live extraordinarily busy lives and simply want their closets handled. They trust that Jaime knows what’s current, what they need, what they’re going to want—and they want it to appear in their closet so they never have to think about it.
This is what she does:
She comes to your home. You go through everything together. She tells you what stays, what goes, and why you’ve been holding onto things that don’t serve you.
Then she builds what’s missing. Not trends. Not someone else’s vision of “power dressing.” A wardrobe that matches your actual life. Your schedule. Your body. Your goals.
She doesn’t do makeovers. She does eliminations. She gets rid of the noise so you can see what actually works.
For ongoing clients, she manages your calendar and your closet. You never think about what you’re wearing. It’s simply ready when you need it.
Because here’s the truth: You didn’t work this hard to still be standing in front of your closet every morning wondering if you look like you belong in the room you’re about to walk into.
You belong. Your wardrobe just needs to catch up.
If you’re ready to stop managing your closet and start owning your presence, let’s talk.