For the past few months, I've been working from home. But my company just moved into a new office, which means goodbye to working in my pajamas and hello to dressing for office life again. So I'm starting a series on dressing appropriately for work. I'm talking about business-casual outfits that aren't totally boring but won't get you sent to HR for a little chat.
My criteria for work-appropriate?
- If you truly wonder if it's okay to wear to work, it likely isn't.
- Accessories, including hair and makeup, are a great way to add personality to an outfit without major risk.
- My caveat to the accessories idea? Super bright nail polish in off-beat colors (blue, yellow, green) on your fingernails doesn't work.
- If your office allows denim, don't be the one that makes them change the rule by wearing denim that's too casual. Avoid anything ripped, bleach, frayed, embellished (which really? Unless it's studs or something equally bad-ass, hopefully you're avoiding embellished denim already!), and TOO TIGHT.
- Undergarments should absolutely be unnoticeable. So no lacy bras underneath thin fabrics and no pantylines.
dress- zara, obi belt- lolli, shoes- aerosolesThis dress is really basic which means it can be dressed up for work in a variety of ways. I belted it so the top hung loosely. Then I realized that when I bent over my
entire chest was on display. The quick fix was a tight black camisole- I have tons of these ranging from neutrals to neons for exactly this reason- they add color and coverage.
Since I walk to work and hate the idea of carrying an extra pair of shoes around, I went with low wedges. Wish I had them in black or dark brown- it would have matched much better.

It's a simple dress and basic shoes in neutral colors. So I went with red lips and big curly hair. And a really cool necklace "borrowed" from my mom. Felt slightly japan-ish with the red lips and obi belt and branch charm.


And I have to share this- my lovely makeshift tripod. It's a chair with a ladder on top and some books to keep the ladder in place. Necessity breeds creativity.