Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is this romanticizing of the South? You think everyone looks like sorority girls wearing dresses to SEC football games?
Large portions of the South have struggling schools and high unemployment/underemployment. So you're going to see plenty of frumpy people with muffin tops wearing too-tight Hollister t-shirts and shitty flip-flops. Just like anywhere else.
+1
Also, pssst... DC is in the south.
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
Wait, were you serious?
Yes. Look at a map. See the Mason-Dixon Line? DC is below it.
We may have lost most of our southern affect and culture because of the constant churn in residents from all over, but, geographically, yes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is this romanticizing of the South? You think everyone looks like sorority girls wearing dresses to SEC football games?
Large portions of the South have struggling schools and high unemployment/underemployment. So you're going to see plenty of frumpy people with muffin tops wearing too-tight Hollister t-shirts and shitty flip-flops. Just like anywhere else.
+1
Also, pssst... DC is in the south.
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
Wait, were you serious?
I lived in SC for a few years and picked up some of the style. I really love bright colors and easy fashion. It really doesn't take much effort. Cute, comfortable skirts. Wear prints. Natural makeup (doesn't have to be heavy!). It really is just a few easy tweaks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I lived in SC for a few years and picked up some of the style. I really love bright colors and easy fashion. It really doesn't take much effort. Cute, comfortable skirts. Wear prints. Natural makeup (doesn't have to be heavy!). It really is just a few easy tweaks.
Dressing like that in DC is a fast way to get yourself categorized as dumb and not serious at work. It doesn't translate to this city's culture -- which, let's face it, contains elements of the northeast and has a big delegation of frumpy-but-super-intelligent people who disdain southern fashion. It's important to know your audience. This isn't South Carolina, which, bless its heart, will never be the nerve center of the US.
I disagree. I don't think you can wear brightly colored clothes or something you'd wear in LA. However, looking nice will always be a better choice than not caring about your appearance. You're naive if you think men and other women here judge you less by appearance.
Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:Kind of like this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We all have to spend a little time in the morning to be presentable for work (agree with PP who said to do otherwise is to sabotage yourself). The difference is the mindset and the amount of time and money spent. Smart northerners do the bare minimum. Southerners of the type we're talking about spend 1-2 hours per day on hair/makeup. That is insane unless you consider your body your only/most important asset.
THIS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is this romanticizing of the South? You think everyone looks like sorority girls wearing dresses to SEC football games?
Large portions of the South have struggling schools and high unemployment/underemployment. So you're going to see plenty of frumpy people with muffin tops wearing too-tight Hollister t-shirts and shitty flip-flops. Just like anywhere else.
+1
Also, pssst... DC is in the south.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I lived in SC for a few years and picked up some of the style. I really love bright colors and easy fashion. It really doesn't take much effort. Cute, comfortable skirts. Wear prints. Natural makeup (doesn't have to be heavy!). It really is just a few easy tweaks.
Dressing like that in DC is a fast way to get yourself categorized as dumb and not serious at work. It doesn't translate to this city's culture -- which, let's face it, contains elements of the northeast and has a big delegation of frumpy-but-super-intelligent people who disdain southern fashion. It's important to know your audience. This isn't South Carolina, which, bless its heart, will never be the nerve center of the US.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:![]()
#beautygoals
Those dresses ruined the color settings on my monitor. MY EYES!
+1
How to unsee this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I lived in SC for a few years and picked up some of the style. I really love bright colors and easy fashion. It really doesn't take much effort. Cute, comfortable skirts. Wear prints. Natural makeup (doesn't have to be heavy!). It really is just a few easy tweaks.
Dressing like that in DC is a fast way to get yourself categorized as dumb and not serious at work. It doesn't translate to this city's culture -- which, let's face it, contains elements of the northeast and has a big delegation of frumpy-but-super-intelligent people who disdain southern fashion. It's important to know your audience. This isn't South Carolina, which, bless its heart, will never be the nerve center of the US.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:![]()
If Kate can do it, we can too!
so we're comparing a non-professional photo of a bunch of young women hanging around a shitty dorm room to a posed, professional sorority photo?