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	><title>Sacha Chua - tag - style</title>
	<subtitle>Emacs, sketches, and life</subtitle>
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	<updated>2006-09-18T18:20:00Z</updated>
<entry>
		<title type="html">Developing a personal style</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://sachachua.com/blog/2006/09/developing-a-personal-style/"/>
		<author><name><![CDATA[Sacha Chua]]></name></author>
		<updated>2006-09-18T22:20:00Z</updated>
    <published>2006-09-18T18:20:00Z</published>
    
		<id>https://sachachua.com/blog/?p=3867</id>
		<content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Today's laundry gave me an insight into what kinds of clothes I love<br>
and would like be part of my personal style. With limited space on my<br>
clothing rack and not enough time to handwash everything, I picked out<br>
just the pieces I love wearing. The clothes that made the cut today?<br>
All of my malongs, my Thai silk pants, and a couple of nicely textured<br>
tops. Jeans, t-shirts, stretch pants, buttoned blouses: all stayed in<br>
the laundry pile for another day. And there's the fact that I'm typing<br>
this blog entry while dressed in a black sari&#8230;</p>
<p>I don't think I'd be happy just shopping at Gap. Or at a Vera Wang<br>
boutique, for that matter. I like clothes with stories. I can get away<br>
with my ethnic clothes now because people give students a lot of<br>
latitude when it comes to outfits. If I can figure out a way to wear<br>
clothes with character throughout my life, that would be fantastic. I<br>
may have to be semi-conservative for a while if I work with IBM, but<br>
if I can find out how to get ethnic accents into business and business<br>
casual clothes, I'll be happy. =)</p>
<p>If money were no object, I'd probably be more likely to bring a wallet<br>
from Sagada than one from Louis Vuitton. If I could have anything I<br>
wanted, I'd rather bring to light an obscure designer than clothe<br>
myself in Armani. I'd rather have tailored clothing than designer<br>
ready-to-wear. I'd rather wear homespun cotton than crisp pinstripes.<br>
Clothes may make the man, but I make my clothes &#8211; that is, I can make<br>
my clothes special.</p>
<p>All of this is academic, of course, because I have other things to<br>
spend time and money on &#8211; particularly as a grad student! &lt;grin&gt;<br>
But I get the sense that this is probably one of those unchanging<br>
things, and I'd like to find role models who've gotten away with it.<br>
The woman from Sonja's Garden, for example &#8211; I remember really liking<br>
her outfit.</p>
<p>So here's the deal: I'll keep a few business-type suits around just in<br>
case I have to wear something conservative. I'll probably use those a<br>
lot if I work at IBM, anyway. But if people want me to wear anything<br>
fancy, they should give it to me. ;)</p>
<p>More thoughts on this eventually&#8230;</p>

<p>You can <a href="mailto:sacha@sachachua.com?subject=Comment%20on%20https%3A%2F%2Fsachachua.com%2Fblog%2F2006%2F09%2Fdeveloping-a-personal-style%2F&body=Name%20you%20want%20to%20be%20credited%20by%20(if%20any)%3A%20%0AMessage%3A%20%0ACan%20I%20share%20your%20comment%20so%20other%20people%20can%20learn%20from%20it%3F%20Yes%2FNo%0A">e-mail me at sacha@sachachua.com</a>.</p>]]></content>
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