CLIENT LIST

Jaime has styled for Adidas, Apple, AT&T, BMW, Bragg, Callaway, Chef'd, Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf, CREA, Crocs, Dell, eharmony, Epson, Glad, Hewlett Packard, Huf Magazine, Infantino, Kimpton Hotels, Macy's, Manscaped, Nordstrom, Oakley, Pier 1 Imports, Puma, Qualcomm, Red Bull, Roku, Stork, Tervis, United Healthcare, Veho, and Western Digital.

Jaime and her work have appeared in The New York Times,  The Los Angeles Times, Nylon Magazine, Goop, The Huffington Post, Design*Sponge, Los Angeles Magazine, Apartment Therapy, Refinery29, Racked LA, LouLou, C Magazine, Huf Magazine, Design Milk, Colin Cowie, Lucky Magazine, Junebug Weddings, Southern Weddings, Bridal Guide, snippet & ink, California Wedding Day, Destination Weddings & Honeymoons, One Fine Day, Clementine Daily, psfk, Daily Candy, The Chalkboard, Foam Magazine, Zooey Magazine, and Free + Native, among others.

About

Jaime Lawson is a wardrobe stylist and entrepreneur based out of Los Angeles and San Diego.  With a strong background in both fashion and corporate advertising styling, she has amassed an impressive client list and a wide breadth of experience.  Jaime has worked for luxury design house Rodarte, styled celebrities and short films, and is an editorial contributor to Huffington Post Weddings, Lucky Magazine, and Huf Magazine.

Previously a ballerina at Ballet Arizona, Jaime left the dance world to pursue a Physics degree at the University of San Diego. An interest in space and cutting edge technology led her to participate in a project with NASA, and later to engineer navigation and missile systems for U.S. Navy ships.

Pulled back to the arts, Jaime returned to school and obtained her Fashion Design Arts degree in Seattle. She designed custom bridal and evening gowns under upscale label Luly Yang Couture, and also founded Bleu Garters, a bridal accessory company. Throughout the evolution of her fashion design career, Jaime has remained faithful to an American-made ethos. Her passion to support American job creation and local manufacturing led her to found The MiA (Made in America) Project.