As much as I love the classic and classy wardrobes and pieces of people like the Duchess of Cambridge or even bloggers like
Mary Orton and Jean from
Extra Petite, neither are really applicable to my life on an everyday basis, for one key reason.
Most of these wardrobes and outfit inspirations are more or less driven by dress codes imposed by conservative work environments. In short, a lot of it is way way
way too fancy for me and my life.
For those in conservative work environments, It makes perfect sense. For most people with conventional work environments, dress codes can dictate people's overall wardrobes. Especially since we in North America tend to spend 40-50+ hours of our week at work, or at least eight hours a day for five of seven days. And if we were to subtract the hours we spend sleeping, basically a good one-third of our life as a responsible adult is more or less spent at our place of employment.
In order to maximize the value of the clothing you own, you need to maximize the opportunity to wear it. So where better to maximize your expensive shirt or pricey purse than as part of your work wardrobe?
But while I work in a work space with offices and computers, I don't work in a conventional work environment. There is no real dress code in place for
anyone. (Well no dress code outside the standard "must not get arrested for indecent exposure" limitation on what we wear) Women are no more limited to wearing skirts as men are limited to always be in pants.
(Addendum: There are some restrictions based on some workplace hazards, but to expound on those would get a touch too specific about what exactly I do)
As a result, baseball caps, graphic tees, jeans, sneakers, even shorts are status quo and in some ways encouraged as there is a general practice of mocking the intern when they show up for their first day in a suit, who tends to stand out like a sore thumb.
With that said, I do try to maintain a certain standard of dress during weekdays in particular, although with two major caveats. For one, 95% of the time, I'm wearing pants (and 90% of those are jeans no less) with the remaining five percent being that one day a month that I feel like/gathered the sense to wear a skirt/dress.
Part of it is personal preference, but a bigger part is that you will stick out like a sore thumb the office wearing a pencil skirt.
Another major caveat? The air conditioning. Even though I work in a space that has an extremely lax dress code, most of the rest of the building I work in doesn't. Which means that when it comes to median temperature, you cover your arms or risk freezing to death. Or catching your death in cold. Your choice.
So there you have it, the secret and the reasons (or excuses if you will) behind my tomboyish, semi-casual to casual work attire. And why I may dress more like
Alterations Needed in the long run.
But I still love window shopping the fancy dresses and skirts that other bloggers indulge on. Even if the only occasion I'll ever have need to wear it would be wedding. Or a funeral.