What type of clothing do you typically wear on your days off work

I’ve been working from home 100% for several years, so there’s no difference. Shorts and t-shirt in summer, jeans and t-shirt or flannel if it’s chilly in winter.

When I was in an office, it was “business very casual” Monday through Friday, so clean jeans and a decent non-t shirt was normal. Two reference points are that this was in San Francisco, and I’m a professional geek in bank operations working for people who generally understood that they hired the contents of someone’s head, rather than the clothes on their body.

The Dowager “What is a weekend?”

I wear Orvis shorts and Carhart T’s. Dressier is Hawaiian shirts . This is about 8 months of the year. Sandals.

I like tactical pants and Irish Fisherman sweaters during colder periods. Half-boots.

Depending on what I’m doing either a bathrobe and slippers (and sometimes socks) or jeans and a t-shirt.
Some weekends I’m busy doing stuff, someweekends I’m just lazin’ about the house

A polo shirt and slacks. Yes, I believe polo shirts are more comfortable than t-shirts and that slacks are more comfortable than jeans, the latter by a large margin.

Other than not wearing a t-shirt with my work logo on it (so I don’t have to do laundry as soon), pretty much the same thing. But work is very casual, typical attire is jeans and a t-shirt, so if I’m not there, it’s just jeans and a different t-shirt.

Generally speaking, jeans, and in cooler weather sometimes cords, and a tee shirt, a long sleeve jersey, or a sweater.

Are you saying you Pooh Bear it when you’re not leaving the house?

Same here. Though now instead of rotating a fleece pull over to a different one different color each day, I’ll wear the same one for 3-4 days before it needs a wash. My standard kit is jeans, hiking shoes/boots, a tee-shirt and usually a fleece top. I did wear shorts more often this summer.

Hey, I were sweats while Pooh bear just lets it all hang out. I wouldn’t want to sit on his sofa.

I practically live in khaki shorts and various T-shirts during the summer. I’m usually barefoot, too. In colder weather, it’s jeans and either a T-shirt or a button-down shirt with a sweatshirt worn over it. Athletic socks and sneakers on my feet or, when it’s very chilly, fleece-lined slippers.

I’ve never had a job that requires more than jeans and a t-shirt. Coming home from work means taking the jeans off and throwing on a pair of sweats. Now that I don’t even have to go to the campus to teach my classes, it’s sweats all the way.

If its more than a nightgown I must be heading to the library for more books.

I can dress how I like at work, but I generally don’t wear the more outré clothing there. At home, either a kikoi (sarong) and t-shirt or shirt; Viking pants and some sort of tunic; surfer drawstring pants and a Baja hoodie; or the cords, linen shirt & waistcoat combo of a low-effort steampunker.

Jeans and a t-shirt, whether at work or not. Used to be jeans and a Hawaiian shirt, but not so much now that some ultra-right wingers took to wearing 'em, and I’m a pasty-pale bald guy. Don’t want to give the wrong impression!

I interviewed at some hoity-toity ad agencies, and it was an eye-opener: as I went up the ranks to meet with The Higher-Ups, the dress code got sloppier. Until I showed my portfolio to an award-winning Creative Director from London… in his ripped t-shirt and the wrinkliest baggy jeans I’ve ever seen.

So I started wearing ironic t-shirts and jeans at my agency job and… no one ever said anything. My wife would marvel “Aren’t you afraid you’re going to get fired?”, but I ended up being a Creative Director… and a slob!

I like polo shirts but they are often cut too tight.

Whether at work or at home, I wear blue jeans with suspenders & tee shirts. In the warm times, shoes are either steeltoed boots or tennis shoes.

If there are feet of snow on the ground, I also wear a long sleeved shirt & a duster as well as calfskinned gloves. Longjohns are for the coldest days & nights.

Sometimes I wear nonsteeltoed boots as they get very cold in the winter. I do use a pair of cork boots when it is icy outside. I carry the regular boots when I wear the corks as they can really tear up a floor.

Even on the two days a year that I stay indoors, I wear blue jeans & a tee shirt.