Your work uniform

3 piece suit, shirt and tie. I lose the waistcoat if it's way too hot like a few days this summer.

Some people have to wear a special type of fancy dress depending on what they're doing.
 
I have to wear a service branded shirt, with epaulettes denoting my rank, black trousers, a service tie (which no one wears) and smart shoes/boots. We are also issued with a fleece/body warmer and a high vis jacket (which lives in the boot of my car).

There's talk of us moving to 'greens' like operational staff but I would be surprised if we do, it'd be too expensive, not to mention confusing for the public if they saw us out and about.

Currently I'll travel to work in uniform, just swap the fleece for another jacket to cover the branding and epaulettes and I look like anyone else wearing a white shirt and black trousers.
 
Not a uniform currently, and dress code is very lax.

I wear, normal shirt, no company logo or anything daft, normal trousers, grey/black trainers.
 
It Tech in a school so during term time it's black/grey trousers, with a dark polo shirt, and shoes (and a plain jumper of my choice in colder weather). During half-terms and holidays, it's pretty much fair game as long as it's not offensive. Would much rather wear jeans etc every day but I guess I can't complain too much. When I injured my foot recently I was allowed to wear plain black trainers and I've kinda just kept wearing them, no-one seems to mind (they look a lot smarter than most trainers do).

Don't get changed when I get to work as I only live a mile away and I walk in, so I don't exactly break a sweat during that 15 minutes.
 
There's no uniform, you just have to look presentable. Saying that most of the people in my department wear a company branded t-shirt, makes choosing what to wear that bit easier!
 
When dealing with clients I'm suited and booted, a lot of the time I work from home or only need to pop into the office briefly so whatever I decided to throw on, mainly jeans/chinos and a polo shirt.
 
Smart casual.

No trainers, no jeans.

Some girls wear flip flops, seen people in a polo (not many), but mostly shirt, trousers and shoes. Tie optional.

Or some people treat it as a fashion show, different outfits all the time.
 

A butcher, heavens no. Same as below.

Im a nurse but in intensive care so I get to wear scrubs. I have particularly strong opinions on nurses and their uniforms.

I hate seeing nurses in uniform in shops like tescos its unprofessional and nasty.
The attacks on nurses going home from work are picked because of the allure of their uniform and status.
in my opinion all nurses should be in scrubs, it would force them to change at work, it would mean that if you have a spillage or are covered in body fluids then you simply change into new ones. you would appear to the public as another member of the public out of work decreasing chances of being attacked or being recognised.

there are more reasons but these are the main ones.



rotters

Here here, I despise nurses travelling in uniform, every trust I have ever worked for has specific policies against it. Everyone should wear scrubs, nursing uniforms are outdated and unfit for purpose, blokes with epaulettes are a military hangover that should have gone years ago.
 
What does your work uniform consist of?
  • Works T-shirt
  • Heat Resistant Pyjamas
  • Fire and Hot metal resistant Overalls
  • Fibreglass Hard hat
  • Hot metal Socks
  • Gloves
  • Safety Glasses
  • Ear Defenders
  • Snood
  • Personal Gas Monitor
Do you change at work, or travel to and from work in your uniform?
Get changed at work, shower in work as well

Is there any bizarre uniform polices where you work?
Only that I don't have to wear the jacket above a certain floor
 
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