Color emotion: how would you describe color to someone who cannot see? Envision a radiant, sun-filled day where the gentle heat grazes your skin and an easy breeze lightly rustles your hair. Now contemplate the flavor of an ideally ripe mango as it oozes sweetness on your palate or waking to the tuneful chirping of birds singing in the early day. These stimuli are comparable to the colors our eyes perceive; they extend beyond a solely visual experience and infiltrate all sensory aspects when we consciously engage with them.

I believe the experience of retail can similarly embellish our reality with aesthetics and emotions and its vibrancy can be conveyed through alternative senses.

When refining aesthetic judgment, acknowledging subtle intricacies around us is key. To this end—we may cultivate our discernment for artistic endeavors such as art and fashion by immersing ourselves in diverse cultural experiences, broad spectrums of creative expressivity and embracing personal preferences distinctively ours. Stepping out from under societal need for conformity allows us to explore what genuinely resonates within each of us at a profound level - not forgetting that good taste evolves concurrently as we mature while continuously probing new regions of creativity.