Edward, I have seen firms with no dress code, one of them is the one of the largest corporations in the world. Its as casual as you can get and I've been in meetings with fairly high level people and it was all jeans with some wearing t-shirts. I have no problem with it and its makes traveling a hec of alot easier packing casual clothes compared to suits. Of course for non business functions you can do whatever you want, but we will never see a return to more formal wear in business, especially wearing ties. After being business casual for the past ten years, wearing a tie now seems incredibly bizarre, but I guess I've had my fill of it having to wear a tie everyday from first grade onward, hated it from day one. The majority of people will naturally choose casual over formal, especially if you work in an
office everyday and that pretty much sums it up now that people have a choice.
I don't think anybody's claiming it's better, just that it's perhaps more appropriate in certain situations. In the same way you wouldn't wear speedos to a wedding, nor black tie to the beach, there's a time and place for all clothing. Some of us feel suit & tie are appropriate at work, others feel business casual (or even just casual) is. The latter are, at least at the moment, in luck. A man can still wish, though.
I don't think anybody's claiming it's better, just that it's perhaps more appropriate in certain situations. In the same way you wouldn't wear speedos to a wedding, nor black tie to the beach, there's a time and place for all clothing. Some of us feel suit & tie are appropriate at work, others feel business casual (or even just casual) is. The latter are, at least at the moment, in luck. A man can still wish, though.
Yeah, I was looking at buggy whips just the other day.
Fortunately, this was not true of powdered wigs and colonial breeches.
Most dress codes I've encountered, relevant to this topic (IE: not gyms and such) deal solely with the lower limits of outfits. I always assumed when an office was business casual, that meant no less than business casual. Are there really many offices that prohibit the wearing of more? If so, that's no good at all. I'm all about people having choice to wear anything they like, and that goes both ways, not just downward. I'm as against forcing suits as I am against forcing casual. On the other hand, if most offices that say business casual don't prohibit ties and jackets, then I see nothing to wish for. The suit man can wear what he likes in such an office. If the problem is that he wants to force all his coworkers to wear suits too, then I'm against that. I think the best way to know what people are like is by how they are when they aren't being told what do do.
What you say is quite true, but unfortunately I've seen some men wearing tank tops, shorts, and flip flops to weddings, funerals and the opera. I know, I know; it's wrong on so many levels that it boggles the mind.
Most dress codes I've encountered, relevant to this topic (IE: not gyms and such) deal solely with the lower limits of outfits. I always assumed when an office was business casual, that meant no less than business casual. Are there really many offices that prohibit the wearing of more? If so, that's no good at all. I'm all about people having choice to wear anything they like, and that goes both ways, not just downward. I'm as against forcing suits as I am against forcing casual. On the other hand, if most offices that say business casual don't prohibit ties and jackets, then I see nothing to wish for. The suit man can wear what he likes in such an office. If the problem is that he wants to force all his coworkers to wear suits too, then I'm against that. I think the best way to know what people are like is by how they are when they aren't being told what do do.
The Fedora, too, is going to become extinct like Spats.
I know growing up and working in Orange County, CA there has always been a very laid back vibe. I work in real estate and in our office the norm runs the gambit from yoga pants and tank tops to suits. I think that the most important thing is feeling comfortable and confidant in what you're wearing. I know, personally, if I show up to a client meeting in jeans and a t-shirt, I'm not going to feel my best and people aren't going to have the same opinion of me that they might if I showed up in a dress and heels. I know personally I'm not seeing a return to more formal attire on a daily basis, but I wonder what the breaking point will be? I mean is there ever going to be a day where wall street brokers show up in jeans and t-shirts? I sure hope not, I really prefer dressing my best to match the occasion.
Pompidou - Would you hire a lawyer that didn't wear a suit if he was as good as Perry Mason?