>>18480214 The most complements I ever had on a piece of clothing was for an h&m cotton sweater I got on clearance for $8. It was green and thick with a moderately loose knit.
>>18480320 I did get very few compliments about clothes, on the top of my head it was about: >a navy Mao collared cotton shirt >laced espadrilles >Saint Laurent sunglasses >a simple red t-shirt (this one is a life hack apparently) >fragrances (many times)
Anonymous
7/6/2025, 1:26:40 PM No.18481154
>>18480131 (OP) Your mistake was thinking compliments on your clothes would validate and raise your self-esteem.
Anonymous
7/6/2025, 9:02:45 PM No.18481463
>>18480131 (OP) It might be where you live. In my state, I’d get a lot of compliments on my fits from random people but the average person there hardly put any effort. But you go to a place like Korea or Japan, I’m sure nobody will say anything, not because they dress better but because they typically don’t compliment strangers
Anonymous
7/6/2025, 9:30:16 PM No.18481484
>>18480214 It's the noticeable stuff that gets compliments. A Gucci plain white t-shirt will get you as many as a normal plain white t-shirt because to an outsider eye it's a plain white t-shirt.
The big flashy logo effectively speedruns the noticeable part, but it's easily doable without it. I've had a bright pink dress shirt in high school (which cost like 7 usd at the time) and it was the piece I received the most compliments for.