Sansa Stark's style has changed as much as she has over the years—which is to say a lot. Here's how Sansa's style has changed and what these looks really ~mean~.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
1
HBO
When we first meet Sansa Stark, she's dressed in blues and furs—a classic Northern lady, which is exactly what she was.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
2
HBO
When it's time to get some face time with her (planned) future mother-in-law, Cersei, Sansa goes all out. She wears her best clothes, ruffles and all. This instance of trying just a little too hard is classic Early Sansa. She was the girly girl who was ready to do anything to move up in station (and south in geography).
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
3
HBO
As Sansa begins her journey away from her home in the North, her style becomes more Southern, but her color palette doesn't. This is a girl who is true to her roots, no matter how eager she thinks she is to move on.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
4
HBO
Sansa's high necklines and bunches of ruffles look out of place with a sunny backdrop. She might have been ready to move on, but she still sticks out as an outsider. She'll have to really learn to blend in if she wants to survive (~foreshadowing~).
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
5
HBO
It's not long before Sansa is embracing the style and color palate of King's Landing, but let's not ignore that rose-embroidered neckline, which might just have foreshadowed the protective role the Tyrells would play in Sansa's life after her father (Ned, sitting on the right) died.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
6
HBO
When things start to get dire for Sansa and her family, her fashion starts to reflect her desire to hide. The loose-fitting gowns and giant sleeves that seem to swallow her up are all in line with Sansa's desire to become invisible at court.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
7
HBO
Even in mourning, Sansa doesn't wear black. In fact, she goes the complete opposite, wearing a cheery, rosie pink. This is the first sign that Sansa knows she has to hide her true feelings if she wants to survive under Joffrey's rule.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
8
HBO
By Season 2, Sansa was wearing the same style, but subtly inching back toward the greys and blues she wore when she lived at Winterfell—maybe this was her silent way of saying she was still a Stark, no matter how much she pretended to want to be a Lannister Baratheon.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
9
HBO
Season 2 also sees the beginning of Sansa's physical abuse, along with the escalation of her emotional abuse. In one memorably horrible moment, she's beaten and her clothes are ripped from her body in court. If Sansa's clothes have been her armor and her way to hide, this moment proves the hiding won't be enough. She'll have to learn to play the game.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
10
HBO
When Sansa gets her period for the first time, she's wearing the same pale blue she favored in Winterfell—a color we won't see her wear again. Goodbye, childhood.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
11
HBO
In Season 3, purple becomes Sansa's signature color. Maybe it's her way of trying to mix Lannister red with Winterfell blue. Maybe it's an expression of how she's growing up and becoming a darker person. Maybe it symbolizes the fact that she's royalty in her own right (can we get a "Queen of the North" chant, please?), even as she's being abused in another court.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
12
HBO
Season 3 also sees Sansa repeatedly sporting a dragonfly necklace that becomes something of a signature for her. Like butterflies, dragonflies undergo a metamorphosis before emerging as beautiful, winged creatures. Sound like anyone else we know?
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
13
HBO
At Sansa's wedding to Tyrion, she wears one of her most beautiful and most symbolic dresses of the series. It's gold (which makes it impossible not to think of the always-debt-paying Lannisters) and trimmed with lions, the Lannister sigil. The family is clearly sending Sansa a message: You belong to us now.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
14
HBO
At Joffrey's ill-fated wedding, Sansa is still wearing her signature dark purple—a sign that she wasn't expecting her life to change that day.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
15
HBO
During most of her stay in the Eyrie, Sansa wears a cloak over her dress. This is significant because the Eyrie is the place where Sansa learns to put all the powers of deception and manipulation she learned in King's Landing to use.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
16
HBO
At the end of Season 4, after helping Littlefinger cover up her Aunt Lysa's murder, Sansa reemerges with a new, bold style: a stunning black dress with feathered sleeves, a homemade statement necklace, and darker hair. At this point, she's ready to embrace the dark side—working with Littlefinger.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
17
HBO
When she returns to Winterfell in Season 5, Sansa maintains her dark look, but tones down her feathered shoulders, covering her dress with a cloak, as if to symbolize the loss of power she feels around the Boltons.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
18
HBO
On the night of her wedding to Ramsay Bolton, Sansa wore a gorgeous white gown with a fur shawl—very much in line with her Northern roots. Almost every inch of skin is covered by layers and layers of fabric though, like armor against the union.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
19
HBO
When she escapes Winterfell, Sansa wears an outfit that looks like something taken from her mother, Catelyn's, closet. That's fitting, since the strength it takes to make a break for it is very reminiscent of the Stark matron.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
20
HBO
In Season 5, when Sansa meets with Littlefinger to hear his apology for leaving her in Ramsay's psychotic hands, she dresses in sleek, dark clothes to match his. They're equals when it comes to playing the game.