I might be exaggerating a bit but I do hate how limited men’s fashion is, especially when you exclude second layers. You can’t wear a nice cardigan when it’s 30+ degrees out so you’re stuck with just a basic t-shirt or collared shirt!
Then wear non basic t-shirts or literally anything else. Different cuts can make a great difference in how a shirt looks, especially when you put accessoires in the equation.
Half of my daily wardrobe is band merch and conference swag. The former I don’t mind showing off because I like those bands, and the latter I don’t mind being a free billboard for because only people in my career field would recognize them anyway. I also only pick the vendor shirts that actually have good/quirky designs and not just their name and logo.
I like a good band tshirt or local art graphic tshirt under a nice flannel short aleeve.
||that might be my whole wardrobe||
Pacific northwest 'eh?
Not American thankfully. Ontario, Canada
Me too!
We’ll disagree here
I might be exaggerating a bit but I do hate how limited men’s fashion is, especially when you exclude second layers. You can’t wear a nice cardigan when it’s 30+ degrees out so you’re stuck with just a basic t-shirt or collared shirt!
Then wear non basic t-shirts or literally anything else. Different cuts can make a great difference in how a shirt looks, especially when you put accessoires in the equation.
Be the change you want to see
Half of my daily wardrobe is band merch and conference swag. The former I don’t mind showing off because I like those bands, and the latter I don’t mind being a free billboard for because only people in my career field would recognize them anyway. I also only pick the vendor shirts that actually have good/quirky designs and not just their name and logo.