Yesterday,
 the temperature outside reached 81 degrees. Today, it was forecast to 
top out at 62, and stay there for the foreseeable future.
This
 20-degree shift meant I was forced to switch from a summer-clothes 
mindset to a winter one, without any kind of transition period. But that
 didn't go over so well. I love my summer clothes, and I wanted to wear a
 sundress!
So 
today I decided to try one of those styling techniques I always see on 
fashion sites but never in the real world—the 
strappy-dress-over-a-sleeved-shirt look!
When
 I layer my clothes, I usually want them to be easily removed and 
replaced, like a cardigan over a tank top, so I can adjust to 
fluctuating ambient temperatures. When the layers are reversed so the 
garment with the most coverage is on the bottom, that ease is lost. I'd 
have to completely take off the dress and shirt, then put the dress back
 on, if I decided I wanted to go sleeveless in the middle of the day. 
But with a forecast high well lower than I'd ever want to be in without 
sleeves, I felt like today was a good day to give this layering style a 
whirl.
Oddly enough, I railed pretty strongly against this look in my 2016 fashion review,
 claiming, "I don't like the look of ugly T-shirts stuffed under 
beautiful dresses." I still don't. The difference between what I 
complained about and what I'm wearing now is that my T-shirt isn't quite
 ugly, and my dress isn't quite beautiful. Both pieces have the same 
middle-of-the road, feminine-but-not-gorgeous, casual-but-classy kind of
 air to them, that makes them look like they belong together.
Do
 I love this outfit? No, not really. Wearing what essentially amounts to
 a jumper dress, I feel somewhat like a first-grader in her school 
uniform. Do I hate this outfit? No, not really. I like the idea of 
adding a little longevity to my summer dresses, without having to resort
 to my stale trick of throwing a blazer on top.
 
 
I like this color combination but maybe if you added a pin with the teal color in it onto the dress, it would bring the colors together more.
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