cupcake
Familiar Face
- Messages
- 95
- Location
- PERTH, Australia
I FINALLY have a proper, stable, full time office job after working in casual (read: easy to hire, easier to fire) hospitality jobs as a barista/waitress and being unemployed for the better part of this year.
I'm relieved to find out we have the option to buy work shirts (either polos or business type collared shirts) to wear to work as I don't want to ruin my good tops by wearing them at work, and I hate sorting through all my clothes in the morning to find something "appropriate". I'm working in the call centre of a big internet company so I don't work with customers face to face so the tone is more business casual, although they prefer the emphasis on business.
I intend to wear the company shirts with pencil skirts and stockings with cardigans and vintage style hair/makeup/accessories.
The no velvet policy is strange, maybe they had an "incident" involving it? I say this because our workplace has a policy in which employees "must wear underwear". This was written after a male employee took a nap on the break room couches whilst wearing shorts and...no underwear. An unfortunate female colleague walked in to the full glory of what he had to offer hahaha!
To the girl also working in hospitality (sorry I forgot who it was!) when I was working in cafes our uniform was much the same. Black shoes, black pants and black shirt. Perhaps if you wore vintage esque shoes like oxfords or saddle shoes with high waisted vintage style pants and then did your hair in rolls with a touch of lipstick? That's what I did. It's vintage-esque without the real vintage. Customers always tend to remember the girl who put that little something extra into her outfit aswell. (Read: more tips!)
I'm relieved to find out we have the option to buy work shirts (either polos or business type collared shirts) to wear to work as I don't want to ruin my good tops by wearing them at work, and I hate sorting through all my clothes in the morning to find something "appropriate". I'm working in the call centre of a big internet company so I don't work with customers face to face so the tone is more business casual, although they prefer the emphasis on business.
I intend to wear the company shirts with pencil skirts and stockings with cardigans and vintage style hair/makeup/accessories.
The no velvet policy is strange, maybe they had an "incident" involving it? I say this because our workplace has a policy in which employees "must wear underwear". This was written after a male employee took a nap on the break room couches whilst wearing shorts and...no underwear. An unfortunate female colleague walked in to the full glory of what he had to offer hahaha!
To the girl also working in hospitality (sorry I forgot who it was!) when I was working in cafes our uniform was much the same. Black shoes, black pants and black shirt. Perhaps if you wore vintage esque shoes like oxfords or saddle shoes with high waisted vintage style pants and then did your hair in rolls with a touch of lipstick? That's what I did. It's vintage-esque without the real vintage. Customers always tend to remember the girl who put that little something extra into her outfit aswell. (Read: more tips!)