Aunt Michelle wants everyone in navy. Your sister-in-law bought matching crawfish shirts before asking anyone. Maw Maw insists the babies wear smocked outfits she picked out herself. And somewhere in the group text, someone suggested "casual but nice" without defining what that actually means.
Louisiana family reunions bring together anywhere from a dozen to fifty-plus cousins, and getting them all dressed in some kind of coordinated way is its own special chaos. The good news? You don't need identical outfits to pull off a cohesive look in photos. You just need a loose plan that everyone can actually follow.
The fastest way to make cousin coordination miserable is insisting everyone wear the exact same thing. Kids have different body types, skin tones, and comfort levels. That shade of coral that looks adorable on your daughter might wash out her cousin completely.
Instead, pick a palette of three to four colors that work together. For a winter reunion, think burgundy, cream, olive, and mustard. For spring, try soft blue, white, blush, and sage. Send the color options to the family group chat with the note: "Pick any of these - solids, prints, whatever works for your kid."
This approach means the eight-year-old who refuses to wear anything but athletic clothes can grab an olive green pullover. The toddler obsessed with twirly dresses can wear her burgundy one. The baby can be in a cream romper. When they all stand together, it reads as intentional without looking like a catalog shoot.
A common mistake is planning outfits that work for school-age kids but forgetting that toddlers and babies have completely different needs.
Babies and crawlers: Prioritize comfort and easy diaper access. A cute bubble romper or simple bodysuit in one of your palette colors does the job. Nobody expects the nine-month-old to stay pristine, so don't stress about fancy fabrics.
Toddlers (ages 2-4): This crew needs movement. Dresses with shorts underneath, soft knit sets, or comfortable button-downs with elastic-waist pants. If your toddler melts down over certain textures or closures, honor that. A happy toddler in a solid-color tee beats a screaming toddler in a smocked Jon Jon every time.
Big kids (ages 5-10): They can handle more structure, but they also have opinions. Give them choices within the color palette. "Do you want the blue dress or the blue and white striped one?" works better than "You're wearing this."
Tweens and teens: Good luck. Honestly, just share the color palette and let them pick from their own closet. If they show up in an acceptable color and aren't wearing something with a giant logo or holes, call it a win.
Here's something that makes a bigger difference than the actual outfits: how you arrange the kids for photos.
Put the brightest or busiest patterns in the center of the group. Flank them with solids. If one cousin shows up in something totally off-palette (it happens), position them on the end or behind a taller cousin. Babies in arms can be wrapped in a coordinating blanket regardless of what they're actually wearing underneath.
For Louisiana outdoor reunions—whether you're at Girard Park, someone's camp, or Maw Maw's backyard in Youngsville—natural light does a lot of the heavy lifting. Position the group so the sun isn't directly behind them or in their eyes, and even mismatched cousins start to look cohesive.
Every family has one. She either didn't read the group text, decided the color palette didn't apply to her grandkids, or genuinely thought neon green counted as "sage."
Don't make it a thing. Seriously. The memory of the reunion matters more than perfect photos. If her kids show up in Christmas pajamas for a spring gathering, just roll with it. Position them strategically for the group photo, take a few shots of just your coordinated crew separately, and move on.
Family reunions are supposed to be fun. The second outfit coordination becomes a source of tension, it's not worth it.
Louisiana reunion venues tend to be one of three things: someone's property with oak trees and maybe a pond, a pavilion at a park, or a camp near the water. All of these have green and brown backdrops, which affects what colors pop in photos.
Colors that stand out against Louisiana greenery: White, cream, light blue, soft pink, burgundy, mustard yellow, coral
Colors that disappear into the background: Hunter green, olive (in heavy shade), brown, black
Patterns that photograph well from a distance: Gingham, simple stripes, small florals
Patterns that get busy in group shots: Large tropical prints, tie-dye, anything with text
If your reunion includes a photographer or even just someone with a decent phone taking the "official" shots, these details matter more than you'd think.
Pack a spare outfit in your car. Not for your own kids—for whoever needs it. A simple white or cream dress in size 4T, a navy polo in size 6, a neutral bubble romper for babies. You will be a hero when someone's toddler dumps red punch down their front twenty minutes before the group photo.
Wet wipes, a Tide pen, and a lint roller also earn their spot in the reunion survival kit. Louisiana humidity means wrinkles fall out naturally, but it also means everything sticks to everything.
Cousin coordination doesn't have to be complicated. Share a simple color palette, let each family make it work for their kids, and save your energy for what actually matters—watching all those littles play together and making memories that last way longer than any outfit.
A Little Southern Charm For Every Stage
Littles Boutique was created to make dressing your littles feel easy, meaningful, and full of charm.
Youngsville, Louisiana
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