A work environment should not contain visible belly buttons, navel jewelry, cleavage, or the top of your thong. Unless you work on a pole.
I'm 5'2". I wear a 38F. They start right under my armpit. The only way I can avoid cleavage is to wear something exceedingly unflattering or a turtleneck.
Just for the record.
It seems like somethings that look rather skanky on someone with an average chest, often look rather unskanky on larger chested women . And it isn't that less real estate is visible, in fact more usually is, it's just less provocative somehow.
I should also note that there are some items of clothing where the reverse is true as well.
Either that, or I've developed this mentality out of self defense along the lines of Plei's explanation.
Scarves, I am telling you-- Scarves,
I have unfortunately been flashed male genitalia on several occasions in the workplace (inadvertantly on the part of the flashers). In all cases, in the field doing archaeology. Male field archaeologists seem to have a sincere aversion to underpants, and when you're climbing into and out of deepish holes in the ground...
We will not even begin to speak of the buttcracks.
However, I have been known to work in a sports bra when it's undgodly hot, so I guess it's fair play. There's workplaces and workplaces...
Announcement: Hershey's Kissables taste better than M&Ms. But they're even less stackable.
You're shattering my world Tom.
I think that with some creativity you could build stuff with them. Alternate them pointy-end-up and pointy-end-down...
Another retouched photos site: [link]
Another retouched photos site
Has this tutorial been posted here?
I have unfortunately been flashed male genitalia on several occasions in the workplace (inadvertantly on the part of the flashers). In all cases, in the field doing archaeology.
Oh dear lord yes. I'm probably more familiar with some of the men I've worked with than their girlfriends.