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Polka Dot to Dot: Spot on style

Published on

Everything you need to know about wearing polka dots — from a single spot to an all-over affair.

a polka dot dress

There are prints that come and go, and then there are polka dots. Perennial, joyful, utterly impossible to tire of — the polka dot has been a wardrobe cornerstone since the 1920s and shows absolutely no sign of leaving. This season at Sugarhill Brighton, we've leaned fully into our love of the dot: from our signature chocolate-and-pink pairing to the high-contrast drama of black and white, we've dressed it up and dressed it down, mixed it and matched it, and frankly had a very good time doing it.


Whether you're a dot devotee or a tentative first-timer, here's how to make polka dots work harder than ever in your wardrobe.

The Signature Combination: Chocolate & Pink

a close up of a polka dot dress

If there is one colourway that defines Sugarhill's approach to the polka dot this season, it's the warm partnership of deep chocolate brown and soft pink. Rich without being sombre, playful without being saccharine — it's a pairing that feels genuinely grown-up and a little bit wonderful.


The key to wearing this combination confidently is leaning into it rather than breaking it up. Our Celeste Shirt Dress in chocolate with pink spots is the starting point for some of our favourite outfits this season, and when you layer a denim jacket like the Dita over the top, you introduce a neutral that lets the spot do all the talking.

The Classic Layer


Let the spot-print midi do its thing, then throw the denim jacket over your shoulders for a casual finish. The blue denim reads as a neutral here — keeping the palette clean and the focus firmly on those beautiful pink spots.


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The Tone Poem


Our ruched Lyra Dress paired with the peach-and-pink stripe Amber Vest is dot-on-stripe done with a light hand — both pieces share warmth and softness, making the combination feel considered rather than chaotic.


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The Full Co-ord


When the print is this good, go all in. The Ariel tie-front top and Patsy wide-leg trousers share the same chocolate-and-pink polka dot fabric — an instant, effortless co-ord that looks like you spent a great deal more time getting dressed than you did.


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Spot Meets Denim


Pair the Ariel with the wide-leg denim Annemarie culottes for an easy, daytime look. Denim is the great equaliser — ground any pattern with it and the result always feels relaxed and right.


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Polka Dot: The Art of Mixing Spots

Here's the thing about polka dots that most people don't realise: mixing them is far easier than it looks, and far more fun than it sounds. The trick is to vary your dot size. Pair a large graphic spot (think our Patsy trousers) with a smaller, more scattered print, and the two will sit together beautifully — the eye reads them as a deliberate pattern play rather than an accidental clash.


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Vary your dot size and the mix will always work. Large and small are a natural pair — it's same-size spots that compete.

Colour harmony is the other ingredient. The Ariel top and Patsy trousers work as a full co-ord because they share the same print. But you can also mix two different spot colourways if you keep the background tone similar: a dark base with a dark base, a light base with a light base. When you introduce a completely contrasting background — say, the chocolate-and-pink spot alongside the black-and-white — you're essentially clashing, which can work brilliantly if you're feeling bold, but requires one piece to dominate and one to recede (usually by size or placement).

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Mix & Match: Dots with Everything Else

The beauty of the polka dot is its versatility as a mixing partner. It plays well with stripes (the most classic print clash in the fashion handbook), it softens structured denim, and it pops brilliantly against a bold block of colour. Here's how we've been styling our spot pieces this season:

Dots + Colour Block


A hot-pink chunky knit like the Keeley with the chocolate spot Patsy trousers is a lesson in how a solid can anchor a print. The pink of the jumper picks up the pink spots — instant harmony.


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Dots + Bold Bomber


The Jinni Jumpsuit is another hero — a wide-leg, belted one-piece in that bold black-and-white spot that pairs unexpectedly beautifully with a coral or peach layer. The Lola Bomber in warm coral does exactly that: the two colours shouldn't work together on paper, yet somehow they absolutely do.


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Dots + Clean White


Sometimes less really is more. A crisp white tee like the Celia — with its sweet scattered hearts — is the perfect foil for the bold statement of black-and-white spot trousers. Effortless and fresh.


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Dots + Stripes


Our Janice Dress — a sleeveless smocked midi in a generous black base with large white spots — is the kind of dress that does all the work for you. Worn alone in summer, it's perfection. Layered with the light denim Amity Jacket, a textural play of pattern-on-pattern that somehow reads as completely understated, it becomes a year-round piece worth reaching for again and again.


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The Golden Rules: Styling Spots with Confidence

After seasons of living in our own prints, a few principles have become second nature to us. Consider these your go-to guide whenever you're unsure:


  • Commit to the print. Polka dots reward confidence. If you half-wear a spot — hiding it under a long cardigan, tucking it entirely away — you lose the joy of it. Let it be seen.

  • Proportion matters. Large dots on a fuller silhouette, smaller dots on a fitted shape — neither rule is absolute, but both are worth bearing in mind.

  • Denim is always a friend. From the tailored Dita Jacket to the relaxed Annemarie culottes, denim grounds any spotted piece in an instant. It's your neutral of choice.

  • A knit in the dot colour. When mixing a solid with a spot, pick up one of the dot's colours in your knit, jacket, or accessory. The Keeley pink knit with the pink-spot Patsy trousers is the perfect example.

  • Let one piece lead. In an outfit of spots and another strong print, decide which is the protagonist. The other piece supports. Usually the larger garment (a dress, trousers) leads; the smaller (a jacket, a top) follows.

Above all: polka dots are supposed to be fun. They exist to make you smile when you get dressed in the morning, to give you a small lift on an ordinary Tuesday. Wear them often, wear them joyfully, and don't overthink it.

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