Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you just time travel from the 80’s?
In OP’s defense, I think this is a reaction to the weird DCUM obsession in weekly threads like this one:
I know some people who are lets just say, very fastidious about their appearance. They pay particular attention to how they dress; the brands they choose to wear, the way they style their hair and an emphasis on portraying the aesthetics of upper class preppy people. They are always overdressed and want to wear expensive clothes. Meanwhile they do not have important jobs or make much money. Some may not even have attended a 4 year college.
Sounds like the same person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you just time travel from the 80’s?
In OP’s defense, I think this is a reaction to the weird DCUM obsession in weekly threads like this one:
I know some people who are lets just say, very fastidious about their appearance. They pay particular attention to how they dress; the brands they choose to wear, the way they style their hair and an emphasis on portraying the aesthetics of upper class preppy people. They are always overdressed and want to wear expensive clothes. Meanwhile they do not have important jobs or make much money. Some may not even have attended a 4 year college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you imagine someone in boat shoes and a garish pink polo walking the streets of Milan?
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Better than the ridiculous Little House on the Prairie fashion the upper-crust in Britain and Europe have going on.
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That’s also here with the Target ladies. Target has been trying to make homesteading in a prairie dress happen for two years now.
Also rich American women:
Honey, those are just sundresses…
Anonymous wrote:I have never really understood American's obsession with and aspiring to look preppy aesthetic in their sartorial choices. I think the look is dated, constricting, unimaginative and very provincial. To me it gives me a sense that someone has not traveled very much beyond America or certain American enclaves and is not very sophisticated.
Anonymous wrote:Did you just time travel from the 80’s?
I know some people who are lets just say, very fastidious about their appearance. They pay particular attention to how they dress; the brands they choose to wear, the way they style their hair and an emphasis on portraying the aesthetics of upper class preppy people. They are always overdressed and want to wear expensive clothes. Meanwhile they do not have important jobs or make much money. Some may not even have attended a 4 year college.
Anonymous wrote:I have never really understood American's obsession with and aspiring to look preppy aesthetic in their sartorial choices. I think the look is dated, constricting, unimaginative and very provincial. To me it gives me a sense that someone has not traveled very much beyond America or certain American enclaves and is not very sophisticated.
Anonymous wrote:I have never really understood American's obsession with and aspiring to look preppy aesthetic in their sartorial choices. I think the look is dated, constricting, unimaginative and very provincial. To me it gives me a sense that someone has not traveled very much beyond America or certain American enclaves and is not very sophisticated.
Anonymous wrote:I have never really understood American's obsession with and aspiring to look preppy aesthetic in their sartorial choices. I think the look is dated, constricting, unimaginative and very provincial. To me it gives me a sense that someone has not traveled very much beyond America or certain American enclaves and is not very sophisticated.
Anonymous wrote:I have never really understood American's obsession with and aspiring to look preppy aesthetic in their sartorial choices. I think the look is dated, constricting, unimaginative and very provincial. To me it gives me a sense that someone has not traveled very much beyond America or certain American enclaves and is not very sophisticated.