Things are pretty chill where I work, we don't really have clients in the office so no tie just nice shirt and pants, but on fridays we can wear jeans and every couple of months we have jeans month. That said I have been meeting with the big boss a lot lately and I have been trying to dress a bit more professionally then is required. I am actually starting to think it makes a difference.
I was big on the whole dress pants thing when I first started, but I think if you wear dark jeans with the right combo of shirt and/or sweater and blazer, you could look just as professional as if you were wearing slacks and a tie. It's all about finding your own style.
not anymore. I used to have to dress in my blue or grey Brooks Bros. Suit every day. Now that I'm student I get to do it Geek Style. Khaki pants, wallaby, dress shirt, blazer. If Im feeling particularly studious I bust out the tweed - with elbow patches of course.
i wear button downs and dockers type shit. slightly casual, no pleats. no tie. tucked in shirt though. took a minute to get used to that. last job was in a mailing facility. i wore whatever i wanted. i still rock jeans tshirt and nikes on fridays (exactly what i'm rocking right now, in fact). students who don't know me always think i'm a student. yet i've never been to college. and i'm an administrator. they bug out sometimes. when i dress semi-pro, it's not as shocking. i'd say the clothes definitely make a difference in the business world.
one thing i find funny is that i actually cared about the clothes i wear during social times before. i would wear button downs with khakis and shit when i went out. now it's pretty much white grey or black t shirt and jeans and often house shoes when i'm not at work. when you have to dress up more for work, makes you want to dress down more away from work.
Relaxed business casual over here, w/ "blue jean" Fridays. I don't wear jeans though, so I'm rockin some velour joints today. probably not really acceptable, but I can get away w/ it.
i work in a lab where about half the time is spent in front of a computer or meetings, the other half is spent in the lab getting dirty. therefore, no one expects us to actually dress up for work. the clinical research folks, on the other hand, have to wear that "business casual" shit. but hey, if i run the risk of getting defecated on, i'm not wearing anything but dickies and an old melvins shirt from high school.
This is funny, yesterday I was speaking with a journalist doing a story comparing "traditional" work environments vs. "nontraditional". She went down this whole list of what would be considered appropriate at my workplace. I just kept saying "fine, fine, fine" through hair colors, piercings, tattoos... I finally stopped her and said, "Listen, unless it was a tattoo of an obscenity on someone's FACE, it's pretty much okay". I had to explain that I manage a nonprofit that teaches teens about HIV awareness and prevention, so we have to have a certain hip factor.
I agree with CousinLarry though, professional dress DEFINITELY changes how people perceive and react to you. I definitely try to err on the side of professional. Throw a tailored jacket over a concert tee, that sort of thing.
nope, but that means on the days i feel like dressing up - everyone's like "what's the occasion? how come you're so dressed up?" uh, nothing. just cause.
like someone said, casual is fine as long as it's clean. no one seems to care, but i do feel a little weird when i wear my chuck taylors.
i work in a documentary film production office, everyone's pretty chill - ie. the woman who works the front desk wears jeans and velour hoodies, the one before her had sleeves.
Best compliment I ever received was from a competitor at a Trade Show who said "You must do a pretty damn good job if they let you go to work looking like that!"
i work in a machine shop, so i wear the same pair of jeans all week, and a variety of grubby shirts. when i travel, it's usually for a trade show, where i have to dress up in some ghey-ass company shirt with puffy sleeves and a starched collar. fuck the man.
Best compliment I ever received was from a competitor at a Trade Show who said "You must do a pretty damn good job if they let you go to work looking like that!"
I've never held a serious job that require any type of dresscode. I usually roll into work unshaven in jeans and a t-shirt. It would be nice to have a dressy type of job for once but I'm sure I would tire of it quickly.
Comments
Things are pretty chill where I work, we don't really have clients in the office so no tie just nice shirt and pants, but on fridays we can wear jeans and every couple of months we have jeans month. That said I have been meeting with the big boss a lot lately and I have been trying to dress a bit more professionally then is required. I am actually starting to think it makes a difference.
Cosign.
Although on Fridays I get to ditch the noose.
one thing i find funny is that i actually cared about the clothes i wear during social times before. i would wear button downs with khakis and shit when i went out. now it's pretty much white grey or black t shirt and jeans and often house shoes when i'm not at work. when you have to dress up more for work, makes you want to dress down more away from work.
K in Canada.
God I miss working in kitchens...
Jeans and a nice shirt. Pretty lax in the publishing world.
Nope...........just clean.
Navy/wht Dunk high
AberbrombieFitch classic blue shirt
Dark blue jeans.........SeanJohn...shhh
Yankee Cap
Navy Blazer
Artist community type thang. Funky but clean.
and hey, i get paid pretty well.
What does one wear with velour pants?
Perhaps a silk shirt with ruffles, unbuttoned to the waist, and a large tiger-eye medallion?
I agree with CousinLarry though, professional dress DEFINITELY changes how people perceive and react to you. I definitely try to err on the side of professional. Throw a tailored jacket over a concert tee, that sort of thing.
like someone said, casual is fine as long as it's clean. no one seems to care, but i do feel a little weird when i wear my chuck taylors.
i work in a documentary film production office, everyone's pretty chill - ie. the woman who works the front desk wears jeans and velour hoodies, the one before her had sleeves.
But I thought you worked at Jollibee? Don't you wear the Jollibee costume at work?
Ironfeet at work....
Biggest bullshit policy here... my department is exempt from dress down Fridays.
It's funny though, that you took it from that particular point A to point B.
they're just regular track pants or whatever. Not pirate-esque as you were hopin, but I did manage to work in a sash.
Lol! I don't remember but I think Paychecks wears those Escada womens clothes.
sorry, i just had to share that little gem
Sabadabada and Rockadelic?
Ok, i'm out>