First Date Dos and Don'ts: Surefire Style Tips and Fashion Faux Pas

Don't wait until the last minute to throw your ensemble together...but do break out a signature piece that shows your personality! Read on for more first date dressing tips!

First Date Dos and Don’ts: Surefire Style Tips and Fashion Faux Pas
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It’s your classic movie montage moment: girl gets ready for date with boy and tries on everything in her closet before finally emerging in an amazing ensemble, her bedroom now carpeted with the contents of her closet. She breezes down the stairs to meet her jaw-dropped suitor, as though she’d thrown on the first thing she saw.

Even in the movies, looking motion-picture perfect isn’t easy. But to extend the metaphor, you want your date to be a romance, not a comedy, drama or horror flick! Here are a few dos and don’ts to make sure you stay on genre:

DO look your best. This is a first impression of sorts, so while you don’t need to reenact the above-mentioned montage, take the time to style your hair, check your teeth for lipstick stains and your dress for wrinkles, and break out a signature piece that shows some personality—a flattering wrap dress, chic cropped jacket or haute pair of leather knee-high boots will do the trick.

DON’T overdo it. Yes, you may want to step it up a notch in the hair, makeup and ensemble departments, but don’t reinvent—this is not the time to try that gelled-up faux-hawk or layer on the multi-colored eye makeup (unless your look is already modern punk). You’ll look like you tried too hard, and your date might get a little scared.

DO plan your look. This will pay off huge. First, you won’t have to tear apart your dresser and undo hours of housekeeping. A frantic, last-minute dash to get date ready will leave you frantic and frazzled—not the ideal state of mind for the already anxiety-inducing event of a first date. You’ll be able to answer the door calm, confident and not covered in sweat. Try on your outfit a day in advance and walk around in it, especially if it’s new, so you’ve tested to avoid any wardrobe malfunctions.

A Li’l Tip: you can create a Personal Shop at MyShape.com that will style outfits just for you, matched to your measurements and fit and style preferences, so you can just click to order a head-to-toe look you’re sure to turn heads in.

DON’T ask your date what he’s going to wear. Unless you’re going to a costume party or a wedding, this may read as an early sign of co-dependence, or he’ll think you’re a control freak. He’s not your girlfriend…but you may one day become his. Feel free to run a few looks by a gal pal, but leave him out of it, at least for now. If you’re not sure what the dress code is for a particular event, make a general inquiry in the vein of “Is this a formal affair or more casual?” That way you can avoid over or under-dressing without his thinking you don’t know how to dress yourself.

DO dress with him in mind. Use what you already know to make strategic choices. For example: if your date is shorter in height, maybe opt for flats over four-inch stilettos. There’s nothing wrong with a woman being taller than her man, but until you get to know him better, it’s best to be sensitive and not tower over him in case it’s something he’s self-conscious about. If he seems reserved, choose an outfit in the slightly more conservative range. This can be done fashionably without compromising your personal style—layering is a huge trend this season, so instead of that plunging halter dress, pick a jersey dress, layer with a blazer or slouchy sweater, and wrap an over-sized scarf loosely around the neck.

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DON’T try to be what you think he wants you to be. Attempting to get a read on exactly what your date is attracted to is a great way to sabotage your chances at easing into a relationship when the real you inevitably emerges. If your style is more feminine but you think he’s into a rock-and-roll girl, don’t show up in head-to-toe Joan Jett leather or, worse, a concert tee featuring his favorite band. You won’t be able to back it up in conversation, he’ll see right through it, and when he walks you to your car and sees your daisy-shaped air-freshener and “Powerpuff Girls” bumper sticker, he’ll either think you’re a car thief or have multiple personalities. Being yourself is the best thing you can do on a first date, even though it’s easier said than done. So if a Nanette Lepore baby doll dress is your style, that’s exactly what you should wear.

If you’re still trying to find your signature style, have trouble finding clothes that fit or just don’t have a gift for styling outfits, completing a style profileat myShape is like having your own personal shopper. Getting your date style up to, well, “date,” is easy and fun with your own Personal Shop.

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5 comments on “First Date Dos and Don'ts: Surefire Style Tips and Fashion Faux Pas


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NathanCM wrote:
I tend to think that these 'professionals' advising us on how to dress are doing us a disservice when it comes to first dates. Some will argue a first date is an interview. Well yes in some ways it is a interview, but not an interview of "do you want the job" but more of "yes I see you are the actual person you claim to be on your resume" type interviews. Very basic of yes 1.) you have a pulse, 2.) you look remotely like your pictures and 3.) you are not apparently under house arrest. Also dressing beyond what you normally would wear is creeping into territory where someone like me would say that you are presenting a false persona of who you are. Now before some fashion geru comes along and tells me I'm a country bumpkin and ought to care what some city slicker says is the 'in' fashion....I spent quite a few years in the Air Force. I know what shined shoes are. I know what a gig line is and how to line it up. I know how to tie a double windsor knot (double is the only way to go). I've even used blousing straps for parades. Google it. Think garder belts for men connecting their shirt tails to their socks so that shirts are tightly tucked in. It sucks. I've done the primp thing to look good and all I can say is F that Shyte. Be yourself. Don't be a slob, but be yourself. Avoid the most basic of basic fashion no no's and you will be GTG. No black socks pulled up while wearing shorts and sneakers. No sandles with a suit. If you are going formal do it correctly. Beyond that be yourself. Dress for weather and for the event of the day. Ignore the shoe fetish people. They are all odd city folk who have more money than sense. Bottom line be yourself. If your date doesn't like how you dress on a daily basis, then why try and fool them the first time? They will be annoyed the second time when you reveal your true self. Spare me the womaneze of how a good woman will force her man to spend money on unwanted clothing to make *her* happy, not him (hint: stop trying to change your man).
I am so glad you wrote this. I have been reading all these posts about fashion, and shoes, and what not to wear and I was thinking "You have got to be kidding me."Basic requirements: Youareclean and so are your clothes. You are wearing clothes that are roughly the right size for your body. They can be too loose, but preferably not too tight. And whatyou are wearing is not so wild that we get people stopping to take a photo with you. Other than that, I really don't care. I will put a little more effort into my clothes than the above--meaning I will meet those standards AND try to wear something flatteringbut if I can talk you into taking me somewhere where I can wear jeans, I will be wearing jeans.

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I tend to think that these 'professionals' advising us on how to dress are doing us a disservice when it comes to first dates. Some will argue a first date is an interview. Well yes in some ways it is a interview, but not an interview of "do you want the job" but more of "yes I see you are the actual person you claim to be on your resume" type interviews. Very basic of yes 1.) you have a pulse, 2.) you look remotely like your pictures and 3.) you are not apparently under house arrest. Also dressing beyond what you normally would wear is creeping into territory where someone like me would say that you are presenting a false persona of who you are. Now before some fashion geru comes along and tells me I'm a country bumpkin and ought to care what some city slicker says is the 'in' fashion....I spent quite a few years in the Air Force. I know what shined shoes are. I know what a gig line is and how to line it up. I know how to tie a double windsor knot (double is the only way to go). I've even used blousing straps for parades. Google it. Think garder belts for men connecting their shirt tails to their socks so that shirts are tightly tucked in. It sucks. I've done the primp thing to look good and all I can say is F that Shyte. Be yourself. Don't be a slob, but be yourself. Avoid the most basic of basic fashion no no's and you will be GTG. No black socks pulled up while wearing shorts and sneakers. No sandles with a suit. If you are going formal do it correctly. Beyond that be yourself. Dress for weather and for the event of the day. Ignore the shoe fetish people. They are all odd city folk who have more money than sense. Bottom line be yourself. If your date doesn't like how you dress on a daily basis, then why try and fool them the first time? They will be annoyed the second time when you reveal your true self. Spare me the womaneze of how a good woman will force her man to spend money on unwanted clothing to make *her* happy, not him (hint: stop trying to change your man).

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RLinDW wrote:
... and then after all this effort, you look down, and notice he's wearing an old pair of shoes.
Which may be a sign his feet are still the same size as they used to be![/i]
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