so wrong on so many levels it's almost funny. and why so prescriptive and doctrinaire about, erm, wearing comfortable footwear? jesus christ, what are you contrivedly trying to prove here?
Or go 'business casual' with a well cut sweater/turtleneck
in both my recent pictures i am literally wearing trainers with a turtleneck and/or a long-sleeve tshirt and baggy trousers. i am not wearing a suit. your objection was that i wore trainers with a light trenchcoat/gabardine. which, what the fuck? why is that a fashion sin? lol where do you get this shit from. people pair layers of outerwear with trainers all the time. it's not like i've just turned up to a wedding in a pair of bright red basketball shoes, or have worn sliders to a job interview. i haven't paired my new balances with a three-piece suit and waistcoat. i'm not wearing formal attire in any way, shape, or form, unless you seriously seem to think an APC trenchcoat is 'businesswear' only. get a grip you moron. trainers can look great with a trenchcoat or macintosh outer layer, and are worn that way by 'fashionable' people in major cities all over the world.
and, as i said above, i have several summer linen suits or loose-cut suits which are not 'formal' wear and don't fit your typical officewear mold, which pair excellently with good trainers and/or desert boots or other 'adaptable' footwear. for instance, i have a charcoal linen suit which has a large draw-string for its waist rather than a zip/buttons, and a very baggy seat/carriage area to go with it. the suit looks way better with trainers than polished, formal shoes.
this linen jacket/trouser combination would look ridiculous with a tie or dress shoes. your prescriptions are wholly meaningless, especially when you're talking about someone (i.e. my) day-to-day clothing to wear around the city or to a café/bar.
tech entrepeneurs because they wanted to appear young and breaking the mold or whatever.
lmao wtf, yet again. silicon valley and enlightened tech gurus aren't the only people who wear business-casual attire to the office, larssen. i work in the fucking creative industries/media. button-down shirts, jackets and lace-up shoes/brogues have not been the expected office-wear in my line of work for decades – since a long-time before steve jobs and the GAP 1990s, let's put it that way. people wear knitwear, trainers, khakis and corduroy, etc, to work in publishing houses, or newspaper news rooms, or media companies. suits are non-existent at even the executive/publishing director level, save for important meetings or client visits, and so on. it would be more weird for me to turn up to work with a polished pair of brogues than with trainers. 'try hard tech gurus'. lmao. are you sure you're not confusing your airless, grey, humourless corner of brussels/the EU machine for the world?
Women different story imo as they shouldn't be required to wear heels all the time
yes, because women only have two alternatives and corporate environments always expect them to wear heels.
what decade are you living in with all this contrived sub-GQ, wannabe-Bond bollocks? you're not a model in a patek philippe one-page glossy magazine advert larssen. you're an awkward policy geek with upwardly mobile pretensions/anxieties. get a grip.
once again, i have to resolve this non-argument by deferring to one simple fact: my 'deplorable' fashion sense has evidently caught the eye of, and helped to win over, this one, who works in/with fashion everyday for a living and knows, i suspect, a thing or two more about fashion 'do's and don't' than you. speaking of good things that have happened in my life lately ...
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so why in the fuck should i listen to a faceless 'fashion guru' on a 15-year-old gaming forum, who apparently is too chickenshit to even share his picture, or superlative dress sense, with approx. 5 active users? i drink your milkshake larssen! i drink it up!
Last edited by uziq (2021-12-14 05:06:48)