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I have clothing made with natural fiber/synthetic fiber mixes that maintain many properties of natural fabrics while imbuing them with non-wrinkle properties as well. The more synthetics in the mixture, the less wearing comfort, but each person's tolerance is different.
 
I've got some shirts that are a cotton-spandex or a polyester-spandex mixture that are comfortable and come out of the washing machine without a wrinkle. I just hang them to dry.
 
I’ve just started. Using quality clothes again, there’s a massive different between a £20 shirt and a £60 shirt in terms of fit and material

Unfortunately the expensive onesdo need more ironing. Because they are cotton or linen instead of polyester
I don't miss it after wearing suits/dress clothes every day for several decades. I dress like a homeless person now... and my personal habits demeanor are heading in that direction too. Something to look forward to.
 
I wore suits for a few years. In the sixties, I was at Gulf Atomics near San Diego, and a white shirt and tie were required. The management was filled with John Birchers, and everyone there was uptight. I came back a few years later and everyone was dressed like a hippie — bell-bottom pants, flowered shirts and sandals. What was funny was their badges still had their picture in a suit and close-cut hair.
 
There's this rule that you are never supposed to wear sandals in a science room but sometimes I did.
 
When I was at a company called UTC, they made all the engineers that had business in the machine shop get steel-toed boots. I still have mine in the box. I found a workaround and never had to wear them.
 
I haven't ironed a piece of clothing in years.

I’ve just started. Using quality clothes again, there’s a massive different between a £20 shirt and a £60 shirt in terms of fit and material

Unfortunately the expensive onesdo need more ironing. Because they are cotton or linen instead of polyester

Moose is right. I work in an office so I own quite a few cotton and linen button-down shirts (cotton for winter/autumn, linen for summer - easier to breathe in), and I always wash and iron my shirts.

I don't mind. My ironing board is in my bedroom by the window, and my bedroom has a ceiling fan (which comes in handy in summer, when it's hard to sleep). So when I iron, I just put on the fan.

It's very peaceful. Gives me time think about plot complications, if I feel up to it, or not think about anything, if I don't. ;)
 
I don't go through many envelopes these days. One just does not send much snail-mail these days.

When I was a kid, I remember sending a letter to my cousin in Alberta once a week. They spent summers here in Niagara, so we grew close. She actually ended up moving here, and we see each other a lot more often now!
 
Snail mail was fun, especially around birthday time and Christmas. My best snail mail story is that when I was a little kid, I mailed my favourite hockey player his rookie card and a letter introducing myself and asking him if he could sign it for me. And he actually did, and mailed it back to me with his own letter. I was over the moon.

For clothing, ever since I started working from home, I pretty much just wear boxers/pajama shorts and a t-shirt. I refuse to use my camera for meetings, so it's all gravy. Being comfortable is my priority !
 
When I was about 12, I sent a fan letter to Paul McCartney. I got a reply, but it was a form letter inviting me to join his fan club - and asking for money! My bubble was burst. I never sent another fan letter again.
 
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