Created by the Scott Paper Company in 1966 as a marketing gimmick to sell paper products.
: Mismatched professional wear (e.g., a blazer with pajama pants). "Decade Day" : Frivolous fashion from the 70s, 80s, or 90s.
Option 1: The "Organized Chaos" Vibe (Best for Instagram/TikTok) If "I’ll just look" was a lie. 👗✨
If you are an employee facing a Frivolous Dress Order, and you wish to engage in lawful, ridiculous protest, here is the standard operating procedure developed by workplace defiance experts.
I wore my pineapple socks today. Susan wore a single, small, silver butterfly clip in her hair. And the water cooler? It is still covered in Post-its. We decided to leave them up.
If you have ever worked in a cubicle farm, you know the drill: The dreaded dress code email lands in your inbox on a Monday morning. It is stiff, jargon-heavy, and utterly joyless. But what happens when an employee decides to obey the letter of that order while obliterating its spirit? They reach for a pad of 3M Post-it Notes.
: Use color-coded Post-its to map out combinations for a single dress (e.g., Pink for "Garden Party," Yellow for "Brunch," Green for "Work"). The "Joy" Audit
Created by the Scott Paper Company in 1966 as a marketing gimmick to sell paper products.
: Mismatched professional wear (e.g., a blazer with pajama pants). "Decade Day" : Frivolous fashion from the 70s, 80s, or 90s. Frivolous Dress Order - Post Its
Option 1: The "Organized Chaos" Vibe (Best for Instagram/TikTok) If "I’ll just look" was a lie. 👗✨ Created by the Scott Paper Company in 1966
If you are an employee facing a Frivolous Dress Order, and you wish to engage in lawful, ridiculous protest, here is the standard operating procedure developed by workplace defiance experts. Option 1: The "Organized Chaos" Vibe (Best for
I wore my pineapple socks today. Susan wore a single, small, silver butterfly clip in her hair. And the water cooler? It is still covered in Post-its. We decided to leave them up.
If you have ever worked in a cubicle farm, you know the drill: The dreaded dress code email lands in your inbox on a Monday morning. It is stiff, jargon-heavy, and utterly joyless. But what happens when an employee decides to obey the letter of that order while obliterating its spirit? They reach for a pad of 3M Post-it Notes.
: Use color-coded Post-its to map out combinations for a single dress (e.g., Pink for "Garden Party," Yellow for "Brunch," Green for "Work"). The "Joy" Audit