| So in my experience sweaters that need to be worn in offices that care about that sort of thing need to a.) be women's sweaters (because male clothes look 'sloppy') and b.) need to have some level of design/fit thought having gone into it. The reason for this is that women in the workplace can't be over or under sexual, so there's a limited range for how the clothes can interact with your body. (This also varies from person to person: I can wear short skirts and still look professional because my legs are shorter than my sister's, but she can wear tops I can't because my breasts are much larger than hers). Oh, and at the cheaper places, 60% of stuff is for teenagers or college students. Literally. So, for example, let's take Target as one of the cheaper brands since I was there earlier. For female clothes here are some examples: [0]https://www.target.com/p/women-s-cropped-turtleneck-pullover... = sweater that looks great until you pick it up and it's a crop top because that's what the kids are into. This is about 30% of what you find. [1]https://www.target.com/p/women-s-crafted-chunky-knit-cardiga... = looks decent until you check the fabric content and, like any woman's sweater under 80 dollars, it's all plastic so it won't insulate you for shit. [2] https://www.target.com/p/women-s-crewneck-pullover-sweater-k... = looks fine, but hover over and check o out the sleeve. Look how thin that is; making thin sweaters saves fabric. And again, this is 100% synthetic (and not fleece or other warm polyester; it's acrylic) So it's basically all that until you spend at least 80 bucks on a single sweater. There are cheaper things that keep you warm, but you can't wear them to an office: [3]https://www.target.com/p/women-s-fleece-quarter-zip-sweatshi...
[4]https://www.target.com/p/women-s-sherpa-longline-1-2-zip-tun... Does this make sense? |