Luke, I’ve seen you and others mention the fashion stuff positively quite a few times, but I don’t think I’ve seen anything of substance about it.
Is it something that can only be imparted in a bootcamp, or can you convey parts of it in a blog post (not necessarily on LessWrong)? Since most readers won’t go to a bootcamp anytime soon, even if a text is less effective per person the aggregate benefits of such a post are likely higher. Or did I miss a link somewhere?
(I did encounter lots of fashion advice on the net, but I didn’t quite get it; I’m asking you about it because I vaguely remember seeing comments of (at least one) bootcamp participant who mentioned a similar problem but who did benefit from (what I assume were) your lessons.)
There’s plenty of good fashion advice out there. I would be very surprised if lukeprog claimed any rationalist insights into the matter. If you are male r/malefashionadvice is good. If you are female, I’d be shocked that you managed to be raised in western culture without having such advice shoved down your throat. (Seriously, though, google in both cases should suffice).
If you are female, I’d be shocked that you managed to be raised in western culture without having such advice shoved down your throat.
It’s extremely unlikely a stranger will offer advice, and if you’re introverted / not that social, co-workers are unlikely to comment on anything that isn’t a big violation of norms (or if you work in a male-dominated field like programming...) That leaves friends, and if you have friends who know fashion, you’d probably already have thought to ask them :)
The other issue I’ve run in to is that I absolutely loathe most mainstream fashions, so most people’s advice will lead me down dead ends. It’s entirely possible to be fashionable without following mainstream trends, but it’s definitely harder to get a start on it.
(sadly I solved all of these problems by having a fairly good fashion sense naturally, so I don’t have any advice ^^;)
I haven’t posted anything substantive about fashion online. It is hard to communicate that stuff even with text and pictures. I would have to write a whole book and clear the rights to hundreds of photos to reproduce what I taught in the minicamp and the longer boot camp, and I definitely don’t have time to do that.
What little I know about fashion, I’ve learned from magazines (women’s fashion magazines in my case, but I’m pretty sure there are men’s magazines too) and from helpful friends (which are probably easier to find if you are a girl.) I could learn a lot more from friends if I was willing to put in any effort or spend money on new clothes.
Luke, I’ve seen you and others mention the fashion stuff positively quite a few times, but I don’t think I’ve seen anything of substance about it.
Is it something that can only be imparted in a bootcamp, or can you convey parts of it in a blog post (not necessarily on LessWrong)? Since most readers won’t go to a bootcamp anytime soon, even if a text is less effective per person the aggregate benefits of such a post are likely higher. Or did I miss a link somewhere?
(I did encounter lots of fashion advice on the net, but I didn’t quite get it; I’m asking you about it because I vaguely remember seeing comments of (at least one) bootcamp participant who mentioned a similar problem but who did benefit from (what I assume were) your lessons.)
There’s plenty of good fashion advice out there. I would be very surprised if lukeprog claimed any rationalist insights into the matter. If you are male r/malefashionadvice is good. If you are female, I’d be shocked that you managed to be raised in western culture without having such advice shoved down your throat. (Seriously, though, google in both cases should suffice).
It’s extremely unlikely a stranger will offer advice, and if you’re introverted / not that social, co-workers are unlikely to comment on anything that isn’t a big violation of norms (or if you work in a male-dominated field like programming...) That leaves friends, and if you have friends who know fashion, you’d probably already have thought to ask them :)
The other issue I’ve run in to is that I absolutely loathe most mainstream fashions, so most people’s advice will lead me down dead ends. It’s entirely possible to be fashionable without following mainstream trends, but it’s definitely harder to get a start on it.
(sadly I solved all of these problems by having a fairly good fashion sense naturally, so I don’t have any advice ^^;)
I haven’t posted anything substantive about fashion online. It is hard to communicate that stuff even with text and pictures. I would have to write a whole book and clear the rights to hundreds of photos to reproduce what I taught in the minicamp and the longer boot camp, and I definitely don’t have time to do that.
How did you learn what you know, then? Is there anything that you could recommend reading?
There’s some recommended reading if you click here and scroll down to where it says “recommended reading”.
Thanks, Luke. I remember seeing that now, I must have forgotten it.
As far as men’s fashion is concerned, Put This On is starting their second season soon.
What little I know about fashion, I’ve learned from magazines (women’s fashion magazines in my case, but I’m pretty sure there are men’s magazines too) and from helpful friends (which are probably easier to find if you are a girl.) I could learn a lot more from friends if I was willing to put in any effort or spend money on new clothes.
dappered.com is a good resource for men’s style