Well in your original post you sounded like you thought this was a problem, that you wanted to be able to creatively express yourself and were frustrated that you couldn't due to your coworkers laughing at you. If you don't care, then you don't care. Awesome. Wear khakis every day, do you. Not everyone is a fashion person. |
No, I care. I keep it bottled up. But I am very glad that you don't feel you need to do this in order to make progress in your field. You rock! |
Thank you ![]() |
I bet it costs more to make clothes that actually fit. Unfortunately, we are not given the option of just paying more. Neutrals, other solid colors. Pretty prints. Nothing that looks like it was randomly glued on, everything with enough tailoring to highlight the body's natural shape. How can this be so hard to find? |
I'm 27 and worked in visual merchandising (designing store windows) for a major upscale department store for a few years after college before grad school. Are you younger than me and do you have more experience than I do? |
I'm 50. Have a nice figure and can afford good quality (but not designer like Gucci and Prada). I lovethe new trends. I love color and love to look fresh. I am complimented all the time. I just bought some great pieces at (gasp) anthropologie and zara as well as saks and NM. If you have a good eye and don't overdo it you can look fashionable and stylish without looking trendy and cheap. I don't want to dress like talbots and brooks brothers catalogue. |
NP and this is the biggest problem with this blouse - it looks cheap! $80 for a polyester shirt with dots that I'm willing to bet won't last 3 delicate cycle washes before hanging off the thread. Expect better for yourselves ladies. |
Thank you. Young at heart here and I don't ever shop in Talbots et al either. |
Yes, yes, yes! Why is everything sleeveless or super long (and heavy). I used to be able to find stuff that ended at the elbow, so it was still fairly cool but looked appropriate. Now that I really need the coverage, I cannot find any. |
I am in my early 30s and have a nice figure, and I still hate everything out there. So let's stop with the age-ism/"past-it"-ness. The reality is, clothing is awful these days. Horrible fabrics, unflattering cuts (loose/flowy/shapeless tops, leggings and "athletic wear" below), piss-poor quality.
OP is dead-on. |
I'm in my mid-30s and fat, but it is grim. That some can't acknowledge this suggests not a difference of opinion, but an ignorance as to how clothes used to be constructed. My sewing skills definitely still produce "homemade" looking clothes, but I am going to practice! |
Yes to both! And a major department store (interesting you didn't say which) is hardly the cutting edge of style, to put it nicely. Most major department stores cater to middle America and are a dying breed. Perhaps that's why you don't get what's happening in fashion today? How young to be that out of it. |
Too bad your fashion forward style can't mask your personality. |
What trends do you love? |
Okay. I'll agree I'm probably a "frumpy matron". I'm middle aged. I had a mother who thought everything should have ruffles, bows, and/or embroidery. When I was young she literally sewed jingle bells on some of my clothes. When I finally got to pick my own clothes I opted for simple, classic looks. If a trend appealed to me, I might pick up one piece, but I wanted clothes I could wear for years.
I agree with everything that's been said here, but I have two additional complaints. Can we get rid of lowrise pants? They don't really look good on anyone. I can remember when pants actually fit. The waistline actually hit the waist, and you didn't have the huge gap in the back. Can we get rid of rayon? It wrinkles badly and has to be ironed, but scorches so easily that you end up with shiny spots. It also is terrible about pilling. I don't have a Neiman Marcus budget. I tend to shop at JC Penney or Sears. Target's awful. I think the quality and prices at Walmart are much better - but that's for stocking up on T-shirts, etc. Even I don't think of Walmart as fashionable. |