Anonymous wrote:Not caring? Probably just different preferences. No need to be so extreme.
Anonymous wrote:I'm 40 and I still care about looking and buying shoes/clothes, is there an age where you stop caring about all of that (fashion) or do you just continue caring until you die?
Anonymous wrote:
I am 61 and have hair colored every four weeks, occasional Botox, manicures every two weeks. I feel somewhat put together until it comes to shoes and clothes. I struggle with plantar fasciitis and now all shoes must be comfort shoes. They are all ugly and I try not to care because hobbling is the only other option. I am carrying extra weight which makes the matronly shoes look worse. I can’t figure out what to wear as the quality is so bad and nothing looks that great for how expensive it is. The only pants that seem to wash and wear well are jeans or joggers/athleisure. Preppy button ups gap and shrink when washed. Dresses are often too short. In my dream world Talbots and Tuckernuck would merge and start making higher quality wash and wear basics with a little lycra. I don’t want to look like an Eileen Fisher museum docent or a Chico’s lady setting sail on a cruise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m 50 and super vain OP. I look at women around my age and wonder if they own a mirror. You should never give up on trying to be and look your best.
I have to say, I agree. I'm 46 and many of my friends don't try at all. And once you are our age, you really start to look terrible if you don't try. I don't spend a ton of time or money, but yes I get dressed every day and put on makeup. I dye my hair 2x/year and cover grays. I am surprised at how much better I look than them even though many used come off as quite attractive.
Anonymous wrote:I’m 50 and super vain OP. I look at women around my age and wonder if they own a mirror. You should never give up on trying to be and look your best.
Anonymous wrote:I mean, my mom is 74, and she still cares about what she wears and how she looks, but she's not into trends or anything. I'm 46, and I don't really care about what's in style, but I do enjoy finding and wearing pretty, flattering clothes. One nice thing about getting older is being freed of the need to wear the latest thing, and instead finding things that you love. I buy less clothing, but I keep and wear those things longer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm 40 and I still care about looking and buying shoes/clothes, is there an age where you stop caring about all of that (fashion) or do you just continue caring until you die?
Some people do. Some people don’t. There is no rule. Middle-aged people are not all alike. Neither are older people.
Anonymous wrote:I'm 40 and I still care about looking and buying shoes/clothes, is there an age where you stop caring about all of that (fashion) or do you just continue caring until you die?
Anonymous wrote:I am 51 and cultivate my own style. I have never chased trends, though. Who wants to look like everyone else? That’s such … basic behavior.