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Wearing corporate clothing can be something to feel good about, proud to represent your corporation and knowing you look good in quality apparel. With companies competing on so many different levels for brand awareness and image identification, corporate clothing has upped the ante. Now many use designer names to create exclusive looks that are on trend and affordable for corporations to buy and therefore available for their employees to wear.
If you are a buyer for you company there are a few things to consider when making your purchase of a range of clothing. Before you commit your budget to the purchase of corporate clothing items bear in mind that not all your employees will be young models. If your business is like any other you will have a range of builds, heights, weights and ages that represent your workforce whom you wish to clothe. It is probably safest then to opt for 'classic' cuts and fits for trousers and skirts. Though it might be seen as highly fashionable when you order pairs of Oxford bags with turn-ups and a button detailed high waist or tulip skirts with frilled or pleated box kick hem (I am deliberately exaggerating the styles here for illustration purposes) those fashions could rapidly become dated and mocked when the new season collection favours a different look based on military uniforms or retro punk perhaps. Classic doesn't have to be boring but it is fairly safe and therefore you could avoid a fashion faux pas if the basic elements of your corporate clothing collection rely upon it. Trousers and skirts do not have to be laundered daily and most companies only provide two of each of these items to their employees unless they are willing to purchase further items themselves.
Why might a woman want four pairs of trousers for work? Well, to answer that let me mention that we have different seasons that require different footwear. For women, different footwear can mean different heel height and therefore requires different hem or leg lengths so that the garment sits correctly and not at 'half mast' when a higher pair of heels is worn. Boots worn in winter very often have a heel that is higher than the ordinary shoe or pump worn in warmer months. Another reason might be for matters of personal hygiene, particularly regarding accidents that can happen during menstruation when leakage might occur, the trousers then requiring laundering when the 'spare' is already in the wash.
Full time workers will mostly wear corporate clothing, five days a week therefore the garments need to be reasonably robust with a good finish in colours that don't bleed or run into other items in the wash that can be easily laundered without requiring special care or dry-cleaning and preferably able to be tumble-dried; not everyone lives in a place with a garden and a washing line or has radiators and clothes horses. For those who use laundrettes to do their washing, being able to avail of the tumble driers there makes sense too. You want your employees to look good so you must provide them with clothing that can maintain its good looks without too much fuss.