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The Best Part of Dressing Up Is Changing Back Into Sweats
Most of us, whether or not we work from home (as I do), have indoor outfits. Theyâre the clothes you look forward to changing into when you get home from work. Theyâre what you put on when thereâs little to no chance that youâll leave the house today. Theyâre things you would never wear outside, that you couldnât really wear to a bar or dinner or certainly not to a meeting but that, in your own apartment, achieve a level of perfect artistry that public outfits often lack. I keep a file in the back of my mind of my favorite indoor outfits; I know which ratty T-shirts go best with which pairs of sweatpants, which college-branded hoodie best pairs with which pair of my boyfriendâs old jeans. I never feel better about myself, more attractive, or better put together than when Iâm staying in my apartment all day wearing my favorite indoor clothes.
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And the very best time to wear indoor clothes, the time when they achieve their truest meaning and highest purpose, is when one comes home from a fancy event. When I get dressed up, when I spend painstaking hours doing my hair or makeup, itâs not for the other people whoâll be wherever Iâm going, or even for my boyfriend if weâre going on a fancy date. I get dressed up for my four-hours-from-now self, the one whoâs going to take off her dress and her heels and put on sweatpants and a raggedy T-shirt. I get dressed up for my very-slightly-future self because I know, like anyone who knows whatâs good knows, that the actual best look is when you come home after something you had to dress up for and put on an indoor outfit with your fancy hair and makeup.
This look canât be achieved on purpose, either. Occasionally Iâll do my hair and makeup like Iâm going to the Met Ball at the beginning of a day when I donât plan to leave the house, hoping to achieve the alchemy of that post-event combination. It never works; sweatpants with fancy makeup, in the daytime, in oneâs own home, feels itchy and self-conscious, an embarrassing distraction. Iâve had to accept that I canât achieve my favorite look without the part where I actually have to go outside and walk places in my shoes and spend money and talk to people. (One exception here is that this does work when you truly intend to go out, when you get fully dressed but then something happens â a crisis, a phone call, a fight, getting way too high â and you unexpectedly have to stay in and ditch your plans. Then you can change back into your sweatpants with your fancy hair and fancy makeup and it all might come together perfectly. But you have to mean it. You have to truly, deep in your most honest soul, intend to go out before you change your clothes. Look, I donât make the rules.)
This is much the same truth as how grabbing random clothing off the floor after sex often produces a perfect look that canât be replicated, not even by combining the exact same items in the exact same way on purpose. Every so often, a bunch of magazines run features about how to style sex hair â hair meant to look like you had a bunch of sex and then rolled out of bed and got dressed without fixing your hair â for a work lunch or first date or whatever. This never works, either. Consciously styled sex hair looks bad exactly one hundred percent of the time. Sex hair only works in context. Itâs just like how most flannel shirts look terrible because you canât just buy a flannel shirt, you have to earn one, ideally by stealing it from someone you once loved and now donât speak to anymore. Itâs the same thing with sweatpants and post-event hair and makeup. Any âmessyâ fashion look only really works if itâs the product of lived experience rather than careful styling, so that a look becomes a trace of what happened to oneâs hair and face and body on a particular day.
Indoor outfits are profoundly cozy, the fashion equivalent of a large bed, a couch with a worn-in butt dent, a small apartment when the radiator comes on in winter. This coziness is the reason I love my indoor outfits more than almost any of my fancy clothes. Coziness is a form of intimacy, offering the things that not everyone gets to see, putting the public self away for the night. Sweatpants with fancy makeup at the end of the night is the fashion equivalent of how a party only really gets good after almost everyone has gone home, when the remaining people have taken off their shoes and are drinking leftover wine out of whichever glasses are sitting near them and saying things about the people who just left that they couldnât say when everyone was still in the room. The best party is the one that happens once the party is technically over. And the best part of the night is not going out in your careful, fancy makeup, but taking selfies on the couch in a sweatshirt afterwards. â[Helena Fitzgerald](, contributing writer
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[Deal of the Day](#)
If youâre not in New York City, or just canât make it over to the [Bandier]( [sample sale]( that's happening this week, donât stress: There are still [really good deals]( on the fitness apparel/athleisure retailerâs website. These fun [tropical-print leggings]( are $89, and other printed pairs â like [these]( and [these]( â are marked down to $69. Need sneakers? These [Nike Free RN Flyknits]( in black are just $99.
[Send this deal]( to your friend who wears leggings 24/7.
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In the News
About That Kendall Jenner + Pepsi Dumpster Fire...
In case you found yourself without internet in the last few days, weâll catch you up: Kendall Jenner, who has shilled for brands like [Estée Lauder](, [PacSun](, and Fendi, made her debut as the face of Pepsi on Tuesday in an advertisement that [many felt]( trivialized and capitalized on the surge of protests weâve seen in the last few years, particularly the Black Lives Matter movement. Pepsi backtracked real fast yesterday, [pulling the ad]( and [apologizing to everyone](, including Jenner. (Sure.) It was too late, though. [Memes were made](. Trevor Noah, Stephen Colbert, and Seth Meyers [skewered it on late night](. Madonna [Instagrammed a vintage photo]( of herself holding a Coke. Itâs one big, branded mess, starring the Kardashian sibling Vogue once called â[the breakout model of her generation](.â
Fortunately, you can still [watch the ad]( in its entirety on Kendall and Kylie Jennerâs YouTube channel. â[Eliza Brooke](, senior reporter
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Feature
[Soulcycle Sold Fans on Fitness, Now It's Cashing In on Clothes](
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Every generationâs fitness craze has an accompanying uniform that eventually becomes iconic.
There were the leotards from the Jazzercise craze of the â70s. Those were eventually paired with spandex leggings during the aerobics trend of the â80s with the helping hands of Denise Austin and Olivia Newton John. There were those ill-advised cargo pants from the early millennia thanks to the [Zumba]( crowd.
If todayâs fitness craze is the [boutique gym class]( â luxury studios offering spin, yoga, and barre for some $34 a pop â then the accompanying uniform of our generation can best be described as fitted black leggings with a graphic muscle tee. And more specifically, black fitted leggings with a printed skull on the upper left thigh, and a muscle tank with the word âSoulâ splashed across the chest.
[Keep reading >>](
BEauty
[Finally, an Online Beauty Shop for Women of Color](
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The beauty industry isnât the most inclusive place for women of color. Sure, [some progress]( has been made to address the concerns of different skin tones and hair types, but itâs still nearly impossible for women of color to conveniently find what they need â whether it be foundation, makeup, or hair products â with with more than just two options at a given place. (See: dark and darker.)
Fed up with mainstream beauty retailers for their lack of diversity, Kimberly Smith, an Ivy League-educated attorney by trade, took matters into her own hands. An avid traveler, Smith wanted to bring her global (and in most cases, only available locally) beauty finds to US shoppers. Just this February, she launched [Marjani](, a beauty e-comm site specifically for women of color that caters to various skin tones, ethnicities, and hair textures.
[Keep reading >>](
[More Good STuff to Read Today](#)
- [Modest Fashion Is Everywhere â for Good and Bad](
- [It's Time to Pull the Baseball Uniform Into the 21st Century](
- [This Site Sells Shockingly Good Makeup and Brushes for $1](
And other stuff that's not on Racked, but is still good:
- [Kyle Mooney Feels Pretty Good About His Alf Sweatshirt]((GQ)
- [Lip Gloss Is Wack]( (The Hairpin)
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