Speaking of dress codes at work, did you hear about the woman Citibank fired because she was too goodlooking?
Heh. That's what started the conversation.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, pandas, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Speaking of dress codes at work, did you hear about the woman Citibank fired because she was too goodlooking?
Heh. That's what started the conversation.
Dress code varies a lot by city as well as industry. DC (when I temped there in the mid-90s) was very conservative - hose, no sandals, no sleeveless, skirts preferred over pants.
I started a little summer project in the Main library yesterday and was amused by how I was dressed (linen palazzo pants, sandals, linen fitted blouse) compared to the people in the department I had a project in (jeans and t-shirts). I'm in public service; it's a whole 'nother ball game. Annoyingly, librarians are still expected to wear suits for interviews, even though we never actually wear them to work.
Speaking of dress codes at work, did you hear about the woman Citibank fired because she was too goodlooking?
Skipper.
Home. Going to lie down w/ cool cloth on head and wait for docs to call. Thanks for well wishes.
Speaking of dress codes at work, did you hear about the woman Citibank fired because she was too goodlooking?
Skipper.
Gilligan.
We're ostensibly business casual here, but people wear jeans, shorts, capri pants, and sandals all the time. Which I am grateful for.
Hope you feel better soon, smonster.
Skipper
Well, skimmer. I thought that might be what started the conversation off, but I went back and couldn't find the beginning of this topic, just lots of talk about ita in denim skirts. Guess I didn't go back far enough!
I am wearing a T-shirt today. Because it's Drug Safety T-shirt Friday. Instituted by me. Generally only observed by me.
Also, our boss is on vacation, so my co-worker and I are going to skip out early and go see Splice.
During the summer we can dress more casually, but the Dean specifies no denim, and no flip flops.
I remember when I interviewed being happy that the women on the panels were not wearing hose, and had sandals on.
In my old library, the big boss wore cut-offs in the summer, so the bar was pretty low.
My department's dress code seems to be "Wear what you would to a family dinner." Way on the casual end of things, but still nice.