Your group chat just pinged with brunch plans at Social Southern or Pamplona, and suddenly you're standing in your closet wondering how to look put-together without looking like you're headed to a job interview.
A blazer is your answer—but not the stiff, corporate kind collecting dust from your last professional headshot. We're talking about the soft, slightly oversized, "I woke up this cute" blazers that make jeans and a basic top look intentional. The kind that says you have your life together (even if you were doom-scrolling until 2 AM).
Not all blazers belong at the mimosa table. Your structured black blazer with the shoulder pads? Leave her at home. She's working too hard for a Saturday morning.
Brunch blazers have a different energy:
Relaxed shoulders that don't look like you're about to give a quarterly presentation. You want that soft, slightly slouchy silhouette that pairs with your favorite denim instead of fighting against it.
Fun colors and textures because this is Louisiana, sis. We don't do boring. Think dusty rose, sage green, soft lavender, or even a subtle pastel plaid. A linen-blend blazer in a warm neutral works year-round and handles our humidity better than anything fully lined.
Pushable sleeves are non-negotiable. If you can't scrunch those sleeves up to your elbows while cutting into your eggs Benedict, what are we even doing here?
Instead of standing in your closet playing mix-and-match roulette, try one of these combinations that work every single time.
The Elevated Casual Relaxed blazer + fitted tank or bodysuit + high-waisted jeans + strappy sandals
This is your "I didn't try too hard but I definitely tried" look. The blazer does all the heavy lifting, so your basics underneath can stay basic. A gold layered necklace and your favorite hoops finish it off. This works whether you're meeting your college roommates or your mother-in-law—versatile queen energy.
The Matching Moment Blazer + matching shorts or wide-leg pants in the same color family + simple heel or wedge
A soft set under a blazer feels polished without being fussy. If you're brunching somewhere a little nicer—maybe celebrating a birthday or an engagement—this formula gives you that elevated vibe without veering into cocktail attire. Stick to lighter fabrics for winter brunches in Lafayette since our "winter" is basically everyone else's early fall.
The Dress Upgrade Oversized blazer + flowy midi dress + ankle boots or mules
Already own a cute dress that feels slightly too casual for the occasion? Throw a blazer over it. Instant transformation. This works especially well with those floral or printed dresses that feel summery—the blazer grounds them for cooler mornings without hiding the dress entirely.
Here's something nobody tells you: blazer sizing is a choose-your-own-adventure situation for brunch.
Sizing up gives you that effortlessly cool, borrowed-from-someone-bigger look. It's relaxed, it layers beautifully over chunky sweaters when we get those random cold snaps, and it photographs well because it's not pulling anywhere.
Staying true to size works when the blazer itself is already cut relaxed. You get a more intentional silhouette without swimming in fabric.
Sizing down is almost never the move for brunch. That tight, buttoned-up look reads "work" no matter what color the blazer is. Save it for client meetings.
When you're trying blazers on, do the hug test. Cross your arms in front of you like you're hugging yourself. If it pulls across the back or feels restrictive, you need to size up or find a different cut. Brunch involves a lot of leaning in for photos and reaching across the table for the last piece of bacon—you need mobility.
Dressing for brunch in Youngsville or Lafayette means accepting that you might leave the house in one weather situation and return in a completely different one. Even in winter, we get those random 70-degree afternoons that turn your cozy layers into a sweaty situation.
Blazers actually solve this better than most outerwear. They're easy to slip off and drape over your chair without looking like you're peeling off survival gear. And when the restaurant has that aggressive AC cranked (because Louisiana restaurants really commit to air conditioning), you have a layer ready.
Stick with unlined or half-lined blazers in breathable fabrics. Linen blends, lightweight cotton, and rayon-cotton mixes all work. Save the heavier wool options for actual cold destinations—not Cajun brunches.
If you're building a brunch-ready blazer collection from scratch, start with these three:
One neutral with personality — not black, not navy. Think camel, oatmeal, dusty taupe. Something that goes with everything but doesn't look like you grabbed the first thing in your closet.
One soft color — blush, sage, powder blue, lavender. This becomes your "I want to look feminine and fun" option.
One subtle pattern — a light plaid, a thin stripe, or a textured weave. Patterns photograph beautifully and make your outfit look more intentional with zero extra effort.
Three blazers, endless brunch combinations. Your group chat won't know what hit them.
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