Travel

Destination dressing: the art of looking at home wherever you land

Fashion and travel editor Gemma Louise Deeks shares how thoughtful wardrobe choices can elevate your travel photography, helping your images feel cohesive, authentic and true to the spirit of a place

A woman in a blue dress stands on a beach at sunset, with turquoise waters and a boat in the distance under a cloudy sky.
A woman in a blue dress stands on a beach at sunset, with turquoise waters and a boat in the distance under a cloudy sky.

Article at a glance

  • Destination dressing is about responding to a place’s culture, climate and aesthetic, creating travel images that feel cohesive and authentic.

  • A small, versatile wardrobe built around timeless pieces, natural fabrics and place-inspired colour palettes delivers more enduring results than trend-led outfits.

  • Thoughtful styling, combined with attention to light, texture and timing, elevates travel photography from casual snapshots to meaningful visual storytelling.

You’ve just arrived at your riad in Marrakech. It’s blisteringly hot outside, the souks are alive and every sense feels heightened. The palette is earthy, offset with rich jewel tones, and there’s an abundance of texture and detail – carved wood, zellige tiles, woven rugs. It’s luxurious yet traditional, deeply rooted in Moroccan culture.

You want to capture the mood of the destination in a photo or a series – but what’s the art behind compelling visual storytelling when we travel?

Woman relaxing on a pink outdoor sofa in a sunny setting, wearing a patterned outfit and sunglasses, with a scenic view of the sea and island.

Gemma in Ibiza

As a fashion and travel editor for over a decade, I’ve learnt there’s an undeniable synergy between the two. Destination dressing is about intentionally curated outfits that respond to the culture, climate and energy of a place. When done well, it’s the difference between travel photos that feel disjointed and those that feel cohesive, elevated and editorial. Ultimately, the best travel images aren’t about where you went – they’re about how you showed up.

In the age of social media and instant sharing, long gone are the days of holiday photos living quietly in an album, waiting to be rediscovered decades later. While Popsa champions bringing memories to life in physical form, the reality is that for many of us, our travels are first experienced and shared through a digital lens.

At its core, destination dressing is a way of celebrating a location rather than competing with it. It’s not about dressing for the camera, but dressing in response to your surroundings. Take Marrakech, a country steeped in tradition and religion, where dressing respectfully is essential. Here, modesty and climate go hand in hand, calling for breathable, loose-fitting silhouettes that offer coverage while remaining practical in high temperatures. Think airy kaftans, minimal branding and a palette that mirrors the landscape: terracotta, emerald green, deep saffron. These choices shape the mood of an image far more effectively than default holiday outfits, resulting in imagery that feels intentional, aspirational and authentic.

Gemma’s looks in Ibiza,

Mallorca

and Ravello on the Amalfi Coast

Destination dressing is a way of celebrating a location rather than competing with it. It’s not about dressing for the camera, but dressing in response to your surroundings

As a seasoned traveller – and someone who lived in the Middle East for over seven years – I’ve learnt that a well-curated holiday wardrobe doesn’t need to be extensive. Timelessness is key. Versatile staples that can move across destinations, climates and years will ensure your photos still feel relevant long after the trip ends. My most worn pieces are those that work in multiple settings. It’s about grouping outfits by mood: colourful and expressive for exotic destinations; or muted and minimal for untouched landscapes.

Influencers Lucy Williams

and Monikh

Greece, for example, is defined by chalky stone walls and glistening waters. The mood is relaxed, raw and grounded in nature. Across its islands, a considered wardrobe of white linen, raffia accessories and soft draping feels entirely at home. Style icon Lucy Williams consistently embodies this approach, particularly in her Grecian travels – a relaxed white co-ord set against cactus-lined paths feels effortless yet thoughtful. Digital creator Monikh is another muse of destination dressing: her earthy-toned linen pieces capture the essence of a place and move seamlessly through Europe’s beachside towns, creating imagery that feels timeless rather than trend-driven.

Colour palettes are often the most intuitive starting point when planning what to pack. The Amalfi Coast calls for lemon yellow, crisp white and cobalt blue, while the Maldives leans into sand, turquoise and palm green. Some destinations (Palm Beach, for example) invite a more playful, glamorous approach. Before travelling, look at imagery of where you’re staying and the surrounding architecture to understand the aesthetic. Ornate or historic settings benefit from understated styling free from loud logos or heavy prints. Modern cities lend themselves to sharper tailoring – think Parisian streets – while flowing silhouettes and movement photograph beautifully in coastal or island settings like the Seychelles.

Gemma’s looks in Santorini,

Ravello

and the Maldives

The Amalfi Coast calls for lemon yellow, crisp white and cobalt blue, while the Maldives leans into sand, turquoise and palm green

Gemma in Ibiza

Texture plays a vital role in travel photography. Fabrics such as linen, silk, raffia and embroidery add depth and visual interest, while lighting is equally important. Plan when you want to capture your images as midday sun can be harsh and unforgiving, whereas early mornings and sunsets bring softness, warmth and dimension to both outfits and surroundings.

Dressing with intention ultimately creates cohesive, elevated travel memories and imagery that resonates long after the journey ends. Platforms like Popsa allow those moments to live beyond the screen, transforming digital photos into something tangible. Features such as Dynamic Themes adapt backgrounds to the colours within your images, enhancing their overall mood, while captions add another layer of storytelling. Whether written personally or refined with AI, they help preserve not just how a place looked, but how it felt.

The takeaway? When style responds to a destination rather than overpowering it, the result is imagery you’ll be proud to share and return to for years to come.