Now, only when required for warmth. In my military days, because I was required to have one under my uniform shirt.
I’ve been wondering about this and almost made a poll here myself. I rarely wear two layers unless it’s cold. I don’t get cold easily so for most of the year it’s one layer, and even in winter I’ll probably wear one t-shirt and a warmer top with the intention of taking the warmer top off indoors if necessary.
But I’ve noticed that most men don’t seem to do this. Where I work I have to wear a t-shirt and it’s always warm there, so I don’t wear anything underneath it. But I think almost everyone else does, even if they complain it’s too warm there too. I’m beginning to feel paranoid that I’m doing something incredibly inappropriate somehow. I’m not sure I could stand another layer, though.
Nope. It’s plenty hot here without wearing extra layers. Even in winter, people tend to keep buildings too warm for my taste. Of course, my “outer” shirt is almost always a t-shirt, anyway, so it would be doubly silly.
The only exception would be days when I need to change costumes a lot–I’ll wear a t-shirt as my “main” shirt, and just pull other shirts over it as I switch characters.
The only time I wear a camisole under a blouse is when the blouse is sheer. Otherwise, I’m one of those who abhor too many layers. When the weather’s hot, I wear a camisole and skip the blouse altogether. Sometimes I wear a layering tee with nothing but a bra, even though it wasn’t made to be worn that way.
I put sometimes.
In my real life outside of work I usually wear only a t-shirt or polo. So no layers.
In my military part time job a tshirt is required.
In cop uniform need something between my vest and skin.
In plain clothes dress shirts always.
When dressed down wearing a gun I need to wear a tshirt because the holster would rub against my skin. Then I wear a bigger shirt over that.