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.
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.
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.
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.
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!
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.