A simple 3x3 square of paper acts as a physical speed bump in a digital world designed for frictionless spending. It forces a moment of reflection: Is this dress a staple, or is it just another frivolous addition to the pile? Summary: Making the Method Work for You

My desk is currently a graveyard of sticky notes trying to justify this "frivolous" dress order. 📝 Step 1: Write down why I don't need it. 📝 Step 2: Realize the pink Post-it matches the hemline. 📝 Step 3: Add to cart.

By 10:15 AM, the cooler was a mosaic. Yellow, pink, green, neon orange—the forbidden colors of the Pantone scale. Someone wrote “My socks are none of your business.” Another: “Define ‘frivolous.’” My favorite, in shaky handwriting near the spigot: “Joy is not a violation.”

At the time, they were seen as the height of "frivolous" consumption—cheap, disposable, and often featuring Pop Art patterns like Andy Warhol's "Souper Dress". 3. Making an Origami "Post-it" Dress

The dress code had demanded uniformity. The Post-its demanded a reply.