If you get a fashion consultant and spend one day and $700 plus fees going shopping, you will gain as much attractiveness as if you spent a full year of 2x/week intense exercise with a personal trainer.
I’ve personally done both and I’ve put a lot of thought into “efficient attractiveness”. I have developed an eye for clothes and it totally changed your perspective in every social interaction, you can’t un-see it.
But that method is much higher variability. It might make said people uncomfortable, and they may not be very helpful unless they have a strong desire to help you.
A guy who had asked me out and been turned down asked me this. It made me pretty uncomfortable. I would say things like, “You could wear this sort of thing, but there’s an element of personal style, what do you prefer?” and he would say things like “What do you like most?” Being directly asked how to optimize his fashion for causing me to be attracted to him was… not an attractant, and made me feel really weird. I don’t feel comfortable telling someone who I’m not currently dating how I would prefer them to dress.
You can go about this more tactfully, but there’s still some weird subtext even so.
“Don’t ask women for advice on dating women unless you’re already dating them” seems like a really terrible loop of suck. I agree that you probably shouldn’t respond to someone turning you down with “If I had been wearing THIS what would you have said?” but I think if you avoid things like that you’re probably fine.
At a $20k income, $700 is a non-trivial expenditure. In Germany, online-services that aid in buying clothes exist (for example, www.outfittery.de). This might be a good compromise between best advice and cost-efficiency.
If you get a fashion consultant and spend one day and $700 plus fees going shopping, you will gain as much attractiveness as if you spent a full year of 2x/week intense exercise with a personal trainer.
I’ve personally done both and I’ve put a lot of thought into “efficient attractiveness”. I have developed an eye for clothes and it totally changed your perspective in every social interaction, you can’t un-see it.
You can save a lot of money on this just by asking people you know who you are attracted to what clothes they like the most on guys.
But that method is much higher variability. It might make said people uncomfortable, and they may not be very helpful unless they have a strong desire to help you.
A guy who had asked me out and been turned down asked me this. It made me pretty uncomfortable. I would say things like, “You could wear this sort of thing, but there’s an element of personal style, what do you prefer?” and he would say things like “What do you like most?” Being directly asked how to optimize his fashion for causing me to be attracted to him was… not an attractant, and made me feel really weird. I don’t feel comfortable telling someone who I’m not currently dating how I would prefer them to dress.
You can go about this more tactfully, but there’s still some weird subtext even so.
(We ended up dating later despite this.)
“Don’t ask women for advice on dating women unless you’re already dating them” seems like a really terrible loop of suck. I agree that you probably shouldn’t respond to someone turning you down with “If I had been wearing THIS what would you have said?” but I think if you avoid things like that you’re probably fine.
At a $20k income, $700 is a non-trivial expenditure. In Germany, online-services that aid in buying clothes exist (for example, www.outfittery.de). This might be a good compromise between best advice and cost-efficiency.
Interesting, can you recommend a specific consultant?
http://statusic.com is very good.
Thanks for the pointer.
I suspect that spending that much on clothes may even backfire in certain social circles in Italy.