You know you can step over or around puddles? I’ve never gotten my shoes wet from going out in the rain in the DC area. Also I don’t care about my hair getting a little rained on (it’s naturally curly and it looks kind of cute when it rains a bit on it) and I cannot stand the feel or sound of weatherproof outerwear. I would much rather be a little damp. |
You need to chill and stop calling people idiots. Nobody cares about your big car ![]() |
If someone doesn’t mind getting a little rained on 10 out of 365 days a year, but they would mind getting rained on 250/365 days a year, then the frequency of rain is a perfectly rational consideration. |
Why do you care? |
This whole forum is about caring what other people wear and you are here...why? |
"inappropriate" is a strange word to use. "Insufficient", yes. 'Inappropriate", no. |
I'm an outerwear addict and I have come to realize proper outerwear is not something people prioritize, at all. Especially rain wear. I wish I could show off my rain jacket collection to you, OP. You would be proud. |
I don't own one rain jacket but I want to see your collection, I'd be proud too. |
One nice navy waxed cotton Barbour is all anyone needs on this board. If you hsve more than that, you're in the wrong place. And probably don't live in the Nova area *snicker* |
DC gets more rain annually than Seattle, and 115 days per year with some form of precipitation. Seattle has more rainy days, but DC is more prone to accumulating a large amount of precipitation very quickly.
I think it's weird to live here and have rain gear. It would be perfectly easy to live here without any snow gear at all (we get enough snow to merit real snow gear like once every 5 or 6 years -- you can just stay inside those days). But DC actually gets a decent amount of rain! |
^ weird to live here and NOT have rain gear |
I have two raincoats that I find to be functional and stylish. (I have others that are more for outdoorsy activities, but these two are my work/traveling raincoats.) One is the Patagonia Larissa trench coat in a navy blue. It appears that Patagonia no longer sells it, but you can find it on Poshmark, the RealReal, etc. It's similar to this Helly Hansen one: https://www.hellyhansen.com/en_us/w-urb-lab-welsey-ins-trench-53853?color=629733&gad_source=1&gclid=Cj0KCQiAwP6sBhDAARIsAPfK_wZtZ1_3VfHQ7_pRKHGMZLYQeeMfNOyqvFwlcHNCwsXliXoL_DdHP4caAntQEALw_wcB&gclsrc=aw.ds I also love the English brand Rains. I have a Rains "longer jacket" that I purchased in London a decade ago, and it's held up very well. The silhouette is simple and elegant. https://www.us.rains.com/collections/jackets-women/products/long-jacket-female?variant=39839760449559 They have a trench coat version, too: https://www.us.rains.com/collections/womens-rainwear/products/curve-jacket?variant=39561511829527 |
If you’re not walking a long distance and driving to and fro , I don’t see the big deal with needing a rain coat. It’s actually more annoying/noisy, holds on to more water, hard to drive in and take on and off |
I’m sorry I offended you with my crocs, leggings, and hoodie under my wool coat and a PJ and parka clad child at Safeway on Tuesday night. I was relaxing after dinner when my 4th grader suddenly remembered his class is collecting cereal boxes for the food assistance center. I quickly checked which store had cereal on sale and we threw on our coats and dashed out because it was 20 min before his normal bed time. Thankfully no one melted and I even paid the extra 15 cents for plastic bags to keep the cereal boxes dry.
I didn’t know running errands was an event I was supposed to prepare for as if it is a lengthy outdoor excursion. Next time I will bring my compass, flashlight, and first aid kit just in case as well. |
Ok folks recommend your rain boots!! |