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Working at home - pants, if I'm feeling very formal. General appearance of a hobo.
In the office, jeans, non-sport trainers, company branded T-shirt.
Meetings, shirt and pants, no tie, black shoes. May have a shave.
Steel toecaps are a must, I had a Scania caliper land on my steelies, saved my foot, fucked the boot.
Ringleader of the Cambridge cartel, pedal champ and king of the dirt boxes (down to 21)
Generallly the higher up the food chain the more formally people would dress, never quite sure if that was about self importance or what they thought partner organisations would expect of managers.
I never go to work in jeans and t shirt - they would have to be 'smart' jeans and t shirt which feels a bit weird so I'm otherwise smart casual I guess. I don't have a management position anymore but I like to have a set of clothes that psychologically tells me I'm at work. Tomorrow I'm working from home but I'll still put on a shirt and trews.
MrsTheWeary has a nurse's uniform - sadly not as sexy as it might sound, especially by the end of a shift
What people wear varies a bit from smart trousers and a shirt to Star Wars t-shirts (did I mention I work in software development).
I always wear a smart shirt and jeans. I don't really feel right at work in a t-shirt.
I'm not going to be managing anyone.
It is a fairly technical role that is dealing with customers via the phone and email with the odd client visit.
In case you didn't know from the other thread it is for an audio company.
Studio: https://www.voltperoctave.com
Music: https://www.euclideancircuits.com
Me: https://www.jamesrichmond.com
Football is rubbish.
I’m doing a few jobs at the moment but that aforementioned corporate gig expects a uniform.
I deliberately don’t wear it — not because I’m a rebel (cos tbh I can’t be arsed and actually I’d be okay wearing it) but because the absence of “the uniform” is different. And I want to signify difference. So it’s a psychological sign: “this experience will be different.” That’s it. A means to an end.
In the last 15 years of being self-employed I've pretty much worn the same thing every day, which is a black t-shirt, blue or black jeans and Redwing boots. The only exception to this is I wear skate shoes when playing drums.
I buy my t-shirts by the dozen every 3 months and they get turned into polishing clothes when they lose their shape.
Jeans are almost always Levi 511's.
Having a lot of ink means I probably need to wear long sleeves but I'd quite like to keep wearing what I have been wearing but I don't want to be underdressed for the role.
Studio: https://www.voltperoctave.com
Music: https://www.euclideancircuits.com
Me: https://www.jamesrichmond.com
Football is rubbish.
As I state above I don't like thinking about clothes very much- I wear the same thing every day and just want to find a solution that will work for the role without it costing too much or requiring me to think about it too much either.
I am looking forward to the gig though.
Studio: https://www.voltperoctave.com
Music: https://www.euclideancircuits.com
Me: https://www.jamesrichmond.com
Football is rubbish.
Dark colours.
Works very well.
FYI Debenham's sizes come up large. Eg your regular 16.5 everywhere else in the world is a 16 from Debenhams.
That's it. My entire knowledge of clothing, here in this thread.
Tees and jeans at home.
https://www.studiowear.co.uk/ -
https://twitter.com/spark240
Facebook - m.me/studiowear.co.uk
Reddit r/newmusicreview
Short sleeved shirts are the work of the devil. Spending on the style they either make you look like a shit surfer, or a middle-management engineer circa 1998.