so i just confirmed my suspicions that i will need business professional attire for my new job. I own one wool boucle skirt suit.
I did buy this suit from BR - the pants were like $40, and I ordered the suit jacket a few days ago (yes the pants are up to my belly button but they actually hang better than low rise pants on me, and besides, my tops will be long enough to cover the waistband):
But does "business professional" generally mean a suit every day? I mean, I'm willing to buy one (maybe two) more suits but I don't even get my first paycheck til 6 weeks after I start so the moolah is limited. I tried on an awesome navy pinstripe suit at Benetton. i am definitely looking for suits that won't make me look matronly or like a clone, yet nothing too out there - it's somewhat conservative. I need some creative ideas to snazz up the suit thing without showing my boobs. ideas? i'm not totally helpless on this or anything, i'm just hoping someone can suggest something cooler than what I'm thinking of. and i'm excited to wear suits, i admit it.
i've found it is better to err on the side of conservative in the beginning until you get a feel for how others in the company dress. usually i am much more conservative than i need to be, but i feel it is better that way.
"business professional" can mean a plethora of things in these days and times... its hard to define if you don't know for sure...
You do not necessarily have to wear suits, but I would wear dress pants with button down, collared shirts. I have a bunch of the cute semi-fitted ones from Express that I wear to work and I always get compliments on how nice and professional I look in them when I wear them to work. I also wear them with nice pencil skirts and it looks really smart. Hey - I'm wearing one right now;)!!
Best of luck with the new job - you are going to be fabulous!!
-- Edited by Farrah at 18:10, 2005-04-13
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"Whatever you are, be a good one." --Abraham Lincoln
If you don't already have one, I would invest in a basic black 3-piece suit - that's a jacket, pants and skirt (or dress, although I prefer skirt since you can change the look more easily with different tops). You can always wear the pants or skirt without the jacket if you figure out that a jacket isn't required everyday.
A black suit may sound boring to some, but IMO it's essential in a conservative business environment, especially if your budget doesn't allow for lots of different color and style suits.
Maybe invest in a good 3-piece (skirt or dress, pants, jacket) to maximize your mix/match opportunities while keeping to your budget? I think that 'business professional' does mean suits or equivalent. Would some brightly colored scarves work for you? Like this:
One would think that as long as you are covered and appropriate that something like this would also work:
or
Adding a colored suit might help break up the monotony (maybe later in the summer once you get a paycheck or 4)
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To be yourself in a world that is constantly trying to make you something else is the greatest accomplishment ~ {Ralph Waldo Emerson}
"business professional" doesn't necessarily mean only suits. As long as you keep your bottoms pretty tailored (trousers, pencil skirts, etc), you can pair them with button-up shirts, nice blouses, fitted sweaters., etc without a jacket. I would take a cue from others in the office.
Darling, I fear that business professional, especially in your new position, means suits. I would check out the outlets, like BR and JCrew. Ann Taylor makes some nice looking suits. Scarves, brooches, necklaces are great ways to jazz up a suit.
BR also has some really nice fitting button downs (I do better at BR than Express with my boobs - not sure if you have that issue). They had a bunch just on sale too. You might want to check.