| Traveling in late March. I usually pack sweaters, jeans, boots when I travel to London. I’ve never been to Zurich. |
| No. |
| Americans are so funny. Do you think Europeans "Dress for the city" like an American when they come to the US? |
| Dressing like yourself in both seasonally and situationally (e.g., professional, casual, etc.) appropriate clothing would be best. You’ll want to feel confident and comfortable, not like an imposter. |
| Lol, nope. |
| The average temperatures will be roughly the same. Precipitation will be greater in London. |
| This is for work? |
| No except for practical weather related reasons. But Zurich can be plenty wet and dreary so I'd still plan on bringing outdoor gear for that even though it may be less of an issue than it is in London in march (though honestly most of northern Europe is pretty dang rainy in march). |
| You’re planning outfits for March!?!? |
euro cosplay, darling! Personally, I just like to whip out my eurotrash mullet and this expression. Fits in everywhere. |
| Thin down jacket for Zurich |
| Zurich is a smaller, more conservative city. |
| More money for Zurich. It’s more expensive. |
| Zurich has a lot of hills. |
This is funny. But Americans definitely dress up differently depending on what city they’re visiting. If they’re going to Miami women wear these long floral maxi dresses. Going to Nashville? Bring out the country boots and Daisy Dukes. Going to Texas? Well that’s a different kind of country, gotta break out the gallon hat. Washington state, yeah, there’s an outfit for that too |