[nabs-l] clothes shopping and organizing
Lavonya Gardner
hotdancer1416 at gmail.com
Thu Oct 18 13:19:44 UTC 2012
another thing that i do, is i hang my clothes in outfits, so i do not have to rush in the morning, as i am not very coherent at 6 a m, and that is what time i have to get.
Sent from my iPad
On Oct 18, 2012, at 7:21, Sophie Trist <sweetpeareader at gmail.com> wrote:
> Carly, while I respect your opinion, I disagree with you. When you do eventually start to do job interview and work, you definitely need to match. If you walk into an office with mismatched clothes, you'll make the wrong first impression on your employer, clients, and other coworkers.
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Carly Mihalakis <carlymih at comcast.net
> To: National Association of Blind Students mailing list <nabs-l at nfbnet.org>,"National Association of Blind Students mailing list" <nabs-l at nfbnet.org
> Date sent: Wed, 17 Oct 2012 22:21:51 -0700
> Subject: Re: [nabs-l] clothes shopping and organizing
>
> Hi, Ashley,
>
> I used to be all confounded by an idea
> of oh my god, not MATCHING! Yet, since my life
> partner is blind I don't feel I need to match for
> him, as well as my figuring out the more
> important things in life than whether your
> clothes, match. I don't work, I'm a college
> student. I dress up for school though, and I
> memorize what different articles of clothing go
> together. I fell so much better after letting
> that whole matching cocophony, go. It won't kill
> ya, contrary to how I used to think, and how you probably, think!
> Good luck, my sister!
> CarAt 07:27 PM 10/17/2012, Ashley Bramlett wrote:
> Hi all, So, I was wondering about clothes
> shopping. Do you shop alone or with friends or
> family? If you go alone, who assist you? Do you
> use a personal shopper and if so, how does that
> work? I wonder if most major department stores
> have personal shoppers; whether they do or not,
> I know they will accommodate and help us, but a
> personal shopper would know how to find clothes
> for different types of people and be used to
> suggesting clothes. Ive only shopped a little
> alone for clothes; in my experience they seem
> short staffed and they did help me but I usually
> had to wait a while. My mother tends to select
> things she feels look good, but I think they
> are probably her style, not always mine. Also,
> anyone know what business casual means? I ask
> because offices Ive worked at often say this
> but that seems to be a big catch all phrase. I
> realize it means nice clothes; no jeans; slacks
> of course; maybe nice blouses and vests. Also,
> anyone want to share a system for organizing
> clothes in the closet? How do you know pieces of
> outfits go together once you wash them? Thanks.
> Ashley
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