SHIPPING
We are proud to offer international shipping services that currently operate in over 200 countries and islands world wide. Nothing means more to us than bringing our customers great value and service. We will continue to grow to meet the needs of all our customers, delivering a service beyond all expectation anywhere in the world.
Do you ship worldwide?
Yes. We provide free shipping to over 200 countries around the world. However, there are some locations we are unable to ship to. If you happen to be located in one of those countries we will contact you.
What about customs?
We are not responsible for any custom fees once the items have been shipped. By purchasing our products, you consent that one or more packages may be shipped to you and may get custom fees when they arrive to your country.
How long does shipping take?
Shipping time varies by location. These are our estimates:
| Location |
*Estimated Shipping Time |
| United States |
5-20 Business days |
| Canada, Europe |
5-20 Business days |
| Australia, New Zealand |
5-20 Business days |
| Central & South America |
5-25 Business days |
| Asia |
5-20 Business days |
| Africa |
5-25 Business days |
*This doesn’t include our 1-3 day processing time.
Do you provide tracking information?
Yes, you will receive an email once your order ships that contains your tracking information. If you haven’t received tracking info within 5 days, please contact us.
My tracking says “no information available at the moment”.
For some shipping companies, it takes 2-5 business days for the tracking information to update on the system. If your order was placed more than 5 business days ago and there is still no information on your tracking number, please contact us.
Will my items be sent in one package?
For logistical reasons, items in the same purchase will sometimes be sent in separate packages, even if you've specified combined shipping.
If you have any other questions, please contact us and we will do our best to help you out.
RETURNS
Order cancellation
All orders can be cancelled until they are shipped. If your order has been paid and you need to make a change or cancel an order, you must contact us within 12 hours. Once the packaging and shipping process has started, it can no longer be cancelled.
Refunds
Your satisfaction is our #1 priority. Therefore, you can request a refund or reshipment for ordered products if:
- If you did not receive the product within the guaranteed time (45 days not including 1-3 day processing) you can request a refund or a reshipment.
- If you received the wrong item you can request a refund or a reshipment.
- If you do not want the product you’ve received you may request a refund but you must return the item at your expense and the item must be unused.
We do not issue the refund if:
- Your order did not arrive due to factors within your control (i.e. providing the wrong shipping address)
- Your order did not arrive due to exceptional circumstances outside the control of megaselectionsnook.shop (i.e. not cleared by customs, delayed by a natural disaster).
- Other exceptional circumstances outside the control of megaselectionsnook.shop.
*You can submit refund requests within 15 days after the guaranteed period for delivery (45 days) has expired. You can do it by sending a message on Contact Us page
If you are approved for a refund, then your refund will be processed, and a credit will automatically be applied to your credit card or original method of payment, within 14 days.
Exchanges
If for any reason you would like to exchange your product, perhaps for a different size in clothing, you must contact us first and we will guide you through the steps.
Please do not send your purchase back to us unless we authorise you to do so.
Checked every single box on that list and now I feel personally called out. The one about moving between work meetings and gallery openings — that's literally my Tuesday. This little PDF validated years of wardrobe choices I couldn't quite articulate to friends who think I'm overthinking fashion.
The rainy weather section alone justified the download.
Finally a style guide that gets the quiet confidence thing. No loud logos, no trying too hard — just polished and intentional. Shared it with my partner who always asks why I spend so much on coats.
Read it on a flight and it described my packing habits perfectly 🧳
I've spent the last three years slowly building a capsule wardrobe around exactly these principles — camel, black, navy, white — without ever having a name for the aesthetic. This PDF handed me the vocabulary. The travel section especially resonated because I always pack outfits that work from the airport lounge straight to dinner, and it was almost eerie seeing that described back to me. Sent it to my best friend who's been trying to refine her closet and she said it was the push she needed to stop impulse buying.
Short, sharp, and weirdly accurate.
The structured staples checklist is now taped inside my closet door. Tailored coats, crisp shirts, polished boots — seeing it laid out like that made me realize I'm three pieces away from a fully cohesive wardrobe.
Describes a lifestyle I'm working toward, not just clothes I want to buy.
Good overall but felt like it only speaks to people already living this way. What about those of us transitioning into this style? A few bridge tips would've helped.
The bit about logos not needing to shout is the most underrated style advice I've read all year.
👏🔥🧥
Mixing timeless items with modern touches — that's exactly how I wear my trench with sneakers. Felt seen.
I work in fashion PR and this is the clearest articulation of the Burberry customer I've come across outside of an internal brief. Every point maps to real behaviors I see in clients daily. The fewer-better-pieces philosophy especially tracks — our most loyal customers aren't the ones buying everything, they're the ones who choose deliberately and wear pieces for years. Brilliant little resource.
Solid read but not much new ground if you already follow heritage menswear.
The color palette section clarified so much for me.
Appreciate the vibe but it reads a bit aspirational for my actual budget right now. The lifestyle it describes is dead-on accurate though — I just wish there was a note about building toward it gradually rather than assuming you're already there.
This made me rethink my entire approach to outerwear.
Gave this to my stylist and she used it as a mood board baseline. The checklist format makes it incredibly practical — we went through each point together and identified gaps in my wardrobe. Within a month I'd filled them with three key pieces that all work together. Before this PDF I was buying reactively. Now everything is intentional.
Quietly commanding attention rather than chasing it — that line rewired something in my brain ❤️
Perfectly captures why I gravitate toward British brands.
Decent concept but the e-commerce store pitch at the end felt disconnected from the rest of the content. The style checklist itself was genuinely useful though.
Two-minute read that'll change how you see your closet.
The travel style section is underrated. I fly twice a month for work and the idea of outfits transitioning from airport to dinner is exactly the standard I hold myself to. This PDF put it into words better than I could.
Not bad. Covers the aesthetic well but doesn't go deep enough into why these specific choices matter beyond looking polished.
⭐🤎👌✨
My wife and I read it together and both felt like it was written about us.
The subtle branding point is everything. I've never liked logos screaming at people and this guide validated that approach completely. It's not about hiding what you wear — it's about letting the quality speak. That distinction matters and most style guides miss it entirely.
Straightforward and well-designed.
Wished it included seasonal examples or specific pieces to start with. The philosophy is clear but I wanted more actionable next steps beyond the checklist.
I moved to London two years ago from Atlanta and completely overhauled my wardrobe. This PDF describes exactly the transformation I went through — structured outerwear that handles the rain, muted palettes, polished boots replacing sneakers for daily wear. Reading it felt like looking at a before-and-after of my own closet. If someone had handed me this guide before the move, I would've saved six months of trial and error and a lot of wasted money on pieces that didn't fit the lifestyle. Now I'm the guy friends text when they need outfit advice for a work trip to Europe.
The fewer-better-pieces philosophy saved my budget and my sanity.
Clean layout, clear points, took five minutes to read.
I've been trying to explain my style to people and this does it for me. Polished, confident, not loud. Bookmarked.
The gallery-openings-to-brunch pipeline described in the first point is painfully accurate for my weekends 😅
Fine for beginners but I was hoping for something deeper.
Heritage checks and subtle monograms — that's the sweet spot and this guide nails it.
Used this as a starting point for my spring closet edit. Every item that didn't fit at least three of these checkpoints got donated. Ended up with a leaner, more versatile wardrobe that actually excites me to get dressed in the morning. The classic color palette section was the hardest filter — I had to let go of some trendy pieces — but the result is worth it.
Made me finally understand why my trench coat gets more compliments than anything else I own.
Love the content but the bonus section at the end felt tacked on. The lifestyle checklist itself is genuinely thoughtful and well-written — I just wish it ended there.
British design tradition appreciation in PDF form.
The outerwear-that-performs point hits different when you actually live somewhere it rains constantly. I'm in Seattle and my Burberry trench is the only coat that makes me feel put-together on a gray Monday morning. This guide understands that function and style aren't opposites.
Read it in the Uber to work and it reframed my entire morning.
Interesting checklist. Some points felt redundant though — the subtle branding and the logos-don't-shout points are essentially the same idea.
This is the PDF I send people when they ask me why I care about what I wear. It's not vanity — it's identity. Every point in here maps to a deliberate choice I've made over the past decade. The section about fashion being part of your identity rather than a performance is something I've been trying to explain for years. Nobody's said it this cleanly before. I printed it out and it lives in my dresser drawer now. Not joking.
🧥🤍🔥⭐👏
Trench with sleek sneakers — that's my entire fall uniform described in one line.
Felt like someone peeked into my closet and wrote a personality profile based on it. The structured carry-on and leather accessories travel point was oddly specific and completely accurate.
Good quick read. Didn't blow my mind but confirmed I'm on the right track.
Investing in fewer pieces has been my mantra since my late twenties and seeing it validated here feels good.
Practical, concise, no fluff.
The lifestyle framing sets this apart from typical brand guides. It's not asking what you want to buy — it's asking who you already are. That shift in perspective made me realize I've been dressing for this identity for years without recognizing it as a coherent style philosophy.
Some good points buried in what's ultimately a brand ad. The checklist is useful but the promotional angle is pretty transparent.
The classic palette breakdown alone was worth downloading.
Sent this to my brother who just started his first corporate job. He needs structured staples and doesn't know it yet.
I moved from fast fashion to intentional dressing about a year ago. Before, I had a closet full of clothes and nothing to wear. Now I own maybe a third of what I used to and every piece works with everything else — camel coat, navy trench, polished boots, crisp whites. This PDF describes the exact mental shift that made the difference. It's less about Burberry specifically and more about a way of thinking about your wardrobe that just happens to align perfectly with what they make.
The weather-doesn't-stop-you mentality is underrated style advice.
Liked the idea but wanted more depth on mixing heritage with contemporary pieces. That's where most people struggle and one line about trenches with sneakers doesn't quite cover it.
Captures a mindset, not just a look.
My favorite detail is how it frames fashion as commanding attention quietly. That's the whole thesis in one phrase and the rest of the PDF delivers on it beautifully 🔥
Clean, smart, reads like it was written by someone who actually wears the clothes.
Okay but not groundbreaking. If you're already into heritage fashion you know all of this.
That airport-to-dinner transition standard changed how I pack.