Imagine this: your favorite song serenades your ears, and you can’t help but sway to the rhythm Burgers blondes brunettes beer booty bikes balcohol bacon bass bmoney shirt, feeling it tug at your heartstrings, inspiring your spirit to soar. Music has an uncanny power to transport you to a specific memory, a cherished place, or a vivid moment in time. Now, picture being able to harness that magic and infuse it into your everyday outfits. Music and style, two powerful forms of self-expression, have the uncanny ability to shape our emotions and influence our perception of the world. Music has the remarkable ability to convey emotions, stories, and personal narratives. Style, on the other hand, can communicate a powerful visual message about your personality, tastes, and moods. Both offer us a canvas for creativity, a way to communicate who we are, and a means to evoke feelings and memories. It all begins with a song, a genre, or an artist that resonates with your soul. Your musical muse should be a source of personal connection, something that ignites a spark within you. Whether it’s a song or piece that empowers you, a genre that captures your essence, or an artist whose style you admire, your musical muse is the heart and soul of your style journey. The music doesn’t have to contain words to provide you with inspiration as I’ll show you below with a couple of outfits inspired by a classical piece I love. This is the fun part – listening intently to your chosen music. If there are lyrics, what are they saying? How’s the mood? Is it a toe-tapping, head-bobbing tune, or is it more about quiet contemplation? Does it conjure images of the beach at sunset, a bustling city street, or a cozy, rainy day at home? Or does it just evoke a feeling or emotion? If so what is that in you?
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Do you naturally want to play it safe? It feels comfortable? Burgers blondes brunettes beer booty bikes balcohol bacon bass bmoney shirt or Do you feel that playing it safe is too boring and almost like a straight jacket for you? If you are someone who likes to have a more safe style, when you copy someone else’s more flamboyant style (thinking that that’s how to be stylish) it can make you feel ungrounded and inauthentic. Then there are others who have gone to extremes such as quitting jobs because of the dress code being too strict for them, making them feel boxed in, stifled, and unable to express themselves and bring their best self to work (and I know that I’m more this way than the other, as I remember a time in one of my early jobs where management talked about bringing in a uniform and I remember thinking to myself “I’ll be quitting then” as even the thought of wearing a uniform makes me break out into hives). I’ve noticed that some of my clients want a set of style rules they can follow, that they don’t want to vary from. This makes them feel safe. Other clients, will want more of a self-imposed set of loose guidelines (please don’t talk ‘rules’ to them) that they will use as a handrail (rules feel like handcuffs to them). When I’m playing it safe, I’m usually in an overly analytical space where I’m thinking too much about what my outfit is communicating, whether it’s giving me the credibility I crave, making me look like the expert I am and that I’m living up to my “image consultant” brand. This relates to my psychological type (INTJ) as getting out of my head and an outfit into the world can sometimes be a sticking point for me. For Jill, who has a very different psychological type to me (ESFJ), for her, playing it safe means that she’s being lazy, not pushing herself to put on a stylish outfit, just getting dressed without really thinking. When she’s feeling down she doesn’t pay attention to the details in the way she would when she’s feeling more buoyant. For Jill, her Sensing function (introverted Sensing to be precise) gives her stability to have continuity in her style, which almost has a uniform aspect (though it won’t look like a traditional uniform). Relying on tried, trusted combinations give them a feeling of stability that motivates her style upward. Jill says that her ability to use the detailed information from her past dressing experiences helps her create new stylish combinations that have a theme (leopard print, being one of them for Jill as it’s her Signature pattern) that is easily observed by others. Jill loves to find herself a formula and repeat it in different ways, such as changing up colours, in which garment the leopard print appears and of course different accessories.
Sebastian Voss –
Well made, looks good as plain white t-shirt, excellently priced.
Nothing fancy, but a well made, inexpensive comfortable, mid to heavy weight plain white t-shirt. Floridians and those in warm climates might find it uncomfortable to wear as an undershirt– but perfect as a regular going around outside t-shirt year round. Heavier (and should be longer lasting) than a simple haines or jockey white thin undershirt. The white is very white, I am ordering grey today. I would buy these at double the price on Amazon.
Scott Stoneking –
Great Quality
Purchased these shirts as a gift and they were exactly what I was looking for. These shirts were comfortable, soft, and the quality of the fabric was great for the cost. The shirts fit perfectly and I will probably purchase more in the future.
tomy@cvctees.com –
Good product a little late but worth it.
Scott Konzen –
Great shirt, great fit! Is more of an orangey gold in color. Definitely not the yellow shown.
I will never reveal the Wu-Tang secret.