FormerHangie
En-Route
I've noticed a trend where lots of adult women in my area are now wearing stretchy Capri length leggings. They're very form fitting. All I can say is that I heartily approve.
I've seen some girls who have no business at all wearing leggings, but most of the time though it just involves an awkwardly pitched tent.
This was my introduction to the fashion, and I too heartily approved:
You are the finest man who ever lived. . .Mesmerizing.....
Oh, now I see what the hoopla is all about.This was my introduction to the fashion, and I too heartily approved:
Oh, now I see what the hoopla is all about.
Stop the negativity. Just post your good pics. I need to learn more about this. GooGoo.
I kinda like jean shorts myself.
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Oh, now I see what the hoopla is all about.
A few 20something girls wear these almost every day to the office. One is absolutely gorgeous so no complaints from me. But I scratch my head at how kids (anyone under 40) these days think it's appropriate for a professional office environment.
If men got to look at those two things all day they'd never have thoughts of going to war.
Many of us are still fighting the Battle of Poon Tang.
Because times change and most offices are just daily holding cells anyway, for work that can easily be done elsewhere in many modern job roles... with less amenities than real holding cells.
Nobody needs to wear a suit, to hang out in the lovely "open workspaces" of today, which are often only one step up from a human warehouse project.
People have generally figured out that what someone is wearing has little effect on what they can do for you, and thinking certain types of clothes produce results is extremely shallow.
My CTO wears jeans and t-shirts in the office. I'm usually more "dressed up" than he is, since I still have the old fashioned notion that my shirts for work should have collars. Doesn't affect either of our abilities to make or save the company money in the slightest, except one...
We'd both happily put on a dress shirt and slacks on the day you visit if you're a customer, just to make you think we're more professional and make a sale, but neither of us measures success that way.
It's just marketing to old people's outdated habits.
Now in the case of the leggings, I suppose one could claim they're a bit more of a distraction than a scruffy engineer banging away on a keyboard in a poorly temperature maintained "cube farm", who had to go out and buy noise canceling headphones to survive in the stupid but cheap as hell "open workplace" environment, but probably not so much so as to cause any serious dips in overall production.
At this point, interviewing a tech worker who has been around long enough to know they'll be shoved into a cubical without walls, who shows up to an interview in a full suit, complete with accessories like a fancy watch and cuff links, would be more suspicious than not. We'd wonder if he was a fan of Mad Men, or something. Or very unimaginative. We might cut him some slack if he had grey hair.
"Okay, nice suit... There's your open workspace cube, and computer, staff meeting is at 3 in this room here. We could do all of this with a conference call and a VPN, and never really need to see you at all, but we're here, so smile and loosen the tie. It'll probably both cut off important circulation to your brain, and make you really hot and sweaty for no good reason. The A/C doesn't really hold a temperature very well in this giant warehouse like office thing."
Nobody cares what we wear. Only that we make them money. Some places have uniforms. Most of the best talent won't work for them, without the pay being significantly above the places that don't require it.
Anyone who shows up with a tie on, after maybe interviews, would be asked where they were interviewing at lunch time.
Dress for success. Even flying the bush I wear a clean company shirt and clean Carhartts, not a T-shirt with old, dirty and torn pants.
I've found that for the most part, it's women that have issues with what women are wearing to work.
Dress for success. Even flying the bush I wear a clean company shirt and clean Carhartts, not a T-shirt with old, dirty and torn pants.
Generally I fly the bush au naturaleDress for success. Even flying the bush I wear a clean company shirt and clean Carhartts, not a T-shirt with old, dirty and torn pants.
Many of us are still fighting the Battle of Poon Tang.
With the exception that a lot of ancient wars were fought over women. Helen of Troy immediately comes to mind.
If you work for yourself at your own tech start up, maybe. Work for the man and the rules are different.Mark Zuckerberg, jeans, t-shirt, hoodie, billionaire.
Steve Jobs, jeans, turtleneck, billionaire.
If you want to be a billionaire, wear jeans and a t-shirt.
If you could have seen what my X could do with a hula hoop you would have married her too.This was my introduction to the fashion, and I too heartily approved:
One of them has to be named Helen... https://twitter.com/troyfans1/status/620323789289730048Did ol' Helen look good in yoga pants?
There was a time this was a Mad Men-esque environment with ties required. Now it's business casual. There are around 1200 people in this office. If you work in a semi-professional office you should act like an adult, and part of that includes dressing appropriately. It would be a different story if you worked by yourself or maybe even in a group of like-minded people. In my mind it's similar to my choice of watches. I have a Timex I keep in my truck because there's no clock in the dash. It's a fine watch and has kept flawless time for years. But I have an Original Grain watch that I prefer wearing most days, really for no reason other than it looks nice.
I really can't over-emphasize how gorgeous this girl is in her tights every day, but I think she's hurting her career. Could she function, as a couple of folks have said, in tights, or even an old t-shirt and jeans? Sure, but there's more to most people's careers than just doing their job. There are times that appearance counts. There are 300 applicants for every job posting we have. She'll be competing with a lot of people for better jobs here. Why not give yourself every advantage?