Dress to Impress! How to Look Your Stunning Best at Festivals

Dress to Impress! How to Look Your Stunning Best at Festivals

The term “dress to impress” has many connotations.

These days the younger generation, and especially the generation that sees gaming as a potential career, will point to the video game “Dress to Impress”.

Reportedly invented by a Roblox user named “Gigi”. For the uninitiated, the game is a multi-player video experience that was released in November of last year and has already garnered a billion hits.

Impressive! In the game, players are given just five minutes to put together outfits for their avatar based on a theme. These creations are then judged by other players before the most popular are revealed. And it’s not just kids using it either; Dress to Impress’s phenomenal success has developed a strong adult user base crediting Roblox with bringing more older gamers to the platform. 

A similar term was first used by the author John T. Molloy in his 1975 bestseller “Dress to Impress” in which he outlined the effect that clothing has on a person’s success in business or personal life. Today the term is ingrained in the English language almost as much as some Shakespearean quotes.

At a recent summer music festival in the UK – you can guess which one – we were most impressed by many ladies in particular who had made an enormous effort with their festival outfits. Mini skirts, crop tops, bodysuits, sleeve tops, playsuits – you name it – all showed that fashion sense and a willingness to dress for the occasion was alive and kicking.

Talking to some of those suitably attired it also showed that such online outfits that look a million dollars can easily be bought for little more than a hundred.

Be that as it may, my own claim to fame when it came to dressing to impress came while working at a school in South London.

Now our headmaster was a likeable fellow but was a practical joker who delighted in playing tricks on his staff, especially newbies. Now this was all in good humour and helped to generate a good spirit at the school but I felt that it was important that the head was taken down a notch.

Then the opportunity arose. I was holding a party at my house and all the staff and teaching assistants were invited. My email invite, mentioning my clothing design background before training as a teacher in passing, stressed the need for everyone to “dress to impress” – essentially to impress me.

The theme for the party was “Romans in Togas” – not too tough – and everyone was told to come appropriately attired as Octavius and Mrs Claudius. 

In a subsequent internal email, I told everyone to ignore the togas request and come dressed in what they were wearing, casual jeans and t-shirts but NOT to tell the head.

Seeing the headmaster and his wife arrive was a highlight of my time at the school.

Fortunately, I kept my job and the head and I remain friends to this day – always remembering to dress to impress.