After all, once you don't have to go to the office anymore, who cares how you look?
Corinne Richardson of St. Louis does. When she agreed to run a
discussion group focused on retirement issues, Richardson found herself
faced with a gaggle of men and women aged 50 to 75, many attired in
Bermuda shorts, worn-out sneakers and old T-shirts, "usually with some
sort of writing on the front." ("My grandson went to Harvard and all I
got was...")
She invited them to perform an experiment. For the next month, whenever
they left their houses, they'd follow a strict dress code: plain
trousers, khakis or full-length jeans (no cut-offs or shorts); shirts
without writing on them; real shoes; navy, black, tweed, plaid or
madras blazers. Hardly the height of fashion, but a step up from
souvenir T's and shorts. She also asked them to pay particular
attention to how the general public — neighbors, passers-by, grocery
store clerks, salespeople, gas station attendants, etc. — responded to
them.
They reported back a month later that "much to their surprise, they
were treated with more kindness, assistance, friendliness and, most
important, with more respect than they had thought possible."
So: Even when you no longer need to telegraph your professional
competence with your clothes, and long after you've stopped believing
the way you dress or do your hair will beguile Prince Charming or catch
the eye of a talent scout who'll make you a star, there's still a
reason not to go out looking like an unmade bed.
I have to admit that, when I first read this, it rankled. Even if
you're the nicest, kindest, smartest, most conscientious solid citizen
imaginable, you still have to dress up or people will write you off as
a no-account nobody they can afford to ignore? It's unfair and
undemocratic. It's elitist, classist and looksist.
But so is the world we live in. You have an inalienable right to leave
the house looking like an unmade bed — but do you really want to
exercise it if it means being dismissed, disregarded and disrespected
by the general public?
In "Dressing Nifty After Fifty: The Definitive Guide to a Simple,
Stylish Wardrobe," Richardson argues that how you dress is a
"reflection of how you feel about yourself" and "an invitation to be
treated in a certain way by others." You're not going to walk around
wearing a sign that says, "Kick me" — so why wear those dumb T-shirts?
You can tell the book was written by a lawyer. It starts with a
disclaimer of responsibility, so you can't sue her for any potential
unfortunate effects of her fashion advice. It's also not a surprise to
learn she took early retirement to follow her passion for the voluntary
simplicity movement. Her book is less interested in turning you into a
fashion diva than in figuring out what clothes you actually need to
live your life, what makes you look better rather than worse, what you
can afford to bag up for the Salvation Army, and how you can organize
and deploy the clothes you keep.
It grew out of her own discovery that, like many tireless and
enthusiastic shoppers, she'd ended up with closets stuffed with pretty
clothes, lots of them still unworn, but nothing to wear. Or, anyway,
not what she needed.
Chapter by chapter, she walks you through the process she developed for
herself by trial and error. What do you do — work, volunteering,
household chores, socializing, exercise, relaxation, etc. — in a
typical two-week period? What clothes, and how many of them, do those
activities require? What do you look like? What looks good on you? By
the end, you've put together a wardrobe that covers every eventuality
that is current, stylish, flattering — and is also small enough to
maintain and keep track of without superhuman effort.
You've also picked up all sorts of sensible advice, from how to tell
you're wearing too much perfume (if you can smell it yourself, it's too
much) to five ways to tie a scarf, to what to wear to a class reunion
(jeweltone dress or pantsuit in the latest style, fantastic looking
shoes and bag).
Sensible fashion advice? It isn't something you run into all that
often, but that doesn't mean it's an oxymoron. We're used to fashion
authorities who burble on ecstatically about this season's must-have
$1,000 handbag, assure you that every woman can wear a bikini, and urge
you to save your lunch money for a divine pair of over-the-knee boots
like the ones Johnny Depp wore in those pirate movies.
Right.
Corinne Richardson, by contrast, is not a fashion magazine editor from
New York. She's a lawyer from St. Louis with a good haircut, a woman
who loves clothes but doesn't want to devote her life to them. Her
advice is not wildly original, which may be just as well. She thinks
women over 50 shouldn't let their hair grow past their shoulders, and
women who need reading glasses should wear them on chains around their
necks — unlike Charla Krupp, author of "How Not to Look Old," who wants
you to grow your hair long and never wear glasses around your neck
because it's like wearing a sign that says "old lady."
Reading Richardson's book won't turn you into Patricia Field or Sarah
Jessica Parker — also just as well: Think what your friends would say
if you showed up for choir practice in leather pants and Valentine-red
hair.
What it will do is help you find the courage to give away all the
clothes you know you'll never wear (or, anyway, shouldn't), organize
your closet so you can find what you're looking for, and dress in a way
that lets you look good to yourself and your friends and neighbors
while inviting the respect of strangers. Isn't that what most grown-ups
who aren't fashion models or fashion editors want from fashion?
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