You wear your "hard clothes" (jeans, a blouse) to the Zoom meeting. But the second the camera is off? The blanket scarf goes on. You layer a quilted gilet over a hoodie to take the dog out, and suddenly you’re ready for a farmer’s market aesthetic. You throw a silk robe over your pajamas to answer the door for a delivery, and you look intentional, not lazy. The "entertainment" component of this lifestyle is where the psychology gets interesting. In the 20th century, "getting ready for a night out" meant Spanx, heels, and a clutch. Today, "getting ready for a night in" is a ritual of layering.
Welcome to the era of —a movement that began as a pandemic necessity and has calcified into a permanent cultural shift. We aren't just dressing down; we are dressing over . The housecoat is no longer a secret shame hidden behind a locked front door. It is the main character. The Uniform of the Unbothered To understand the Over Clothes lifestyle, look at the retail landscape. Department stores report that sales of "dual-purpose loungewear" (a oxymoron that somehow works) are up 300% year-over-year. The humble kimono robe, the sherpa pullover, the "shacket" (shirt-jacket), and the cashmere throw-blanket-with-sleeves have become the new power suits.
I have interpreted this as a cultural and practical trend piece about the rise of "over clothes" (loungewear, robes, kaftans, shackets, and blanket scarves) as the dominant uniform for modern living, blurring the lines between WFH comfort, street style, and stay-at-home entertainment. The Great Un-Dressing: Why "Over Clothes" Are Now the Only Clothes