"We visited there once. Loved the school colors." |
Even teen stores sell college shirts and random kids buy them. Old school college swag is especially a thing. My nieces beg for all my old college stuff and none of them went there (or would have even wanted to). It's "cool" fashion. My kids collected a ton of t-shirts between them and wear them all. The t-shirts of the schools that rejected you seem to be a point of particular pride on college campuses. It's kind of hilarious and a great exercise in both humility, being over it, and getting the big picture. |
As I said two kids, and no we didn’t just get a tee shirt. They got things like notebooks, keychains, a throw blanket for the dorm, a jacket, a couple glasses, sweatshirt, hat etc. it’s quite easy to ring up that size bill and you know what? They deserved it and still wear/use it all. For what it’s worth, they both each have W&M hoodies too lol |
Clothes are clothes. If someone picked up a good sweatshirt while visiting colleges, good for them. The only time it matters is when some schools have a seniors day and everyone displays where they are going. Other than that, it doesn't matter. But I do think you are testing the gods by wearing the sweatshirt of an ED school before admittance. Would keep that one in the closet. |
I love our W & M swag even though my kid didn’t end up there! |
If nothing else, wearing swag is a good conversation-starter. |
We bought a few things from admitted schools. All free or on sale, so no big outlay. She wears some of the ones she didn't choose and gave some to little sis. |
Lots of kids wear swag from schools they have visited. Maybe they love maroon and orange. Maybe the cut is super flattering. Maybe they hope to go there one day. Maybe they are just having fun announcing that they are looking at schools. It's not that deep |
Nice scenario this time. Respect that you have not given up overusing the parentheses! |
my kid is not inclined to wear merch from random colleges they don't attend. why would they?
I bought a bunch a merch from my college and law school, but had no interest buying merch from a college I turned down (or which turned me down). |
We let our kids purchase t-shirts or hoodies on all our college visits if they wanted. It wasn't mindless consumerism - every time they wore it they were reminded what their goal is. What you see as mindless consumerism is actually strategy and motivation. Whatever school they choose is fine by me - it's their path. Ivy, state, it doesn't matter to me. It also shows spirit and joy even if you don't attend. That is why NFL, NHL and college jerseys are everywhere; it does not mean you will play for them but that you think they are great! |
This is so weird. |
My expensive SUV is useful. Functional. And used daily. You're buying fabric that was produced via chemicals and sweatshops just to shove it in a dresser. |
Same. Bought a hoodie if on the list post-tour, no hoodie if not. She lives in them. |
Cringe. |