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1[[quoteright:270: https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/work_dress_tips.jpg]]
2
3->'''Judge Chamberlain Haller:''' Mr. Gambini, didn't I tell you that the next time you appear in my court that you dress appropriately?\
4'''Vinny Gambini:''' You were serious about that?
5-->-- ''Film/MyCousinVinny''
6
7You ever see a sign outside a business that reads "No Shoes, No Shirt, No Service"? A bar that bans construction boots and jeans? A fancy-shmancy restaurant downtown where men must wear a dress shirts and ties? A high school that doesn't allow short-shorts, [[BareMidriffsAreFeminine bare midriffs]], or muscle shirts? Those are Dress Codes.
8
9Anytime a place has rules for what people should wear and shouldn't wear. This can include uniforms, but in that case the code is simply to wear the appropriate uniform. Places that require uniforms include: BoardingSchool, private school, military bases and police stations.
10
11Actual dress codes allow more freedom, especially depending on the situation--and on the creativity of people trying to "bend" the rules. For example, at a posh gala that requires ties, a {{Cowboy}} may wear a skinny bolo tie and try to get in (though the {{Bouncer}} may view this as LoopholeAbuse). At a fancy bar that bans hoodies, a rich TechBro CEO may try to claim that his $500 Versace hoodie should be OK.
12
13This trope applies just as much in RealLife as in fiction. Three of the most common places for dress codes are schools, workplaces (particularly offices), and fine dining establishments. Schools which enforce dress codes may carve out exceptions, i.e. "spirit wear" or casual wear allowed as a reward, on birthdays, at regular intervals, or in exchange for a small donation to charity [[note]] and sometimes a combination of the latter two [[/note]] Students may be ChafingAgainstTheDressCode, especially in a BoardingSchool with a strict code. Some entire plots in school-set stories are about [[AntiSchoolUniformsPlot hating the official school uniform]].
14
15Workplaces often have "Casual Fridays" and at a WackyStartupWorkplace, employees wear flip flops, and yoga pants and hoodies every day. There are still limits, of course, although on many shows the characters will take their sartorial freedom to [[HilarityEnsues hilarious extremes]]. Some workers may wear outlandish garb and others may wear {{Stripperiffic}} outfits that turn everyone's heads (this plot point may be a way to show skin and add {{Fanservice}}).
16
17Posh restaurants, wood-paneled clubs, and fine bars where LuxuriousLiquor is sold may require men to wear a suit and tie, and women may be required to wear dresses and high heels. These requirements can even end up screening out a MillionairePlayboy on vacation who's wearing shorts and a t-shirt or a wealthy {{socialite}} wearing a designer pantsuit and sandals. This can also be in other formal situations like black tie dinners, gala events or {{Standard Royal Court}}s.
18
19In fiction, three reasons for stating dress codes are:
20# To ensure an elite, highbrow ambiance, such as at a fancy ClassicalMusic opera concert.
21# To delineate status, such as in a DecadentCourt full of wealthy BlueBlood nobles, where only top royalty can wear a certain item, hat, or color.
22# To show that a character [[TheLawOfConservationOfDetail is going to violate the code, and get in some form of trouble over it]]. (In which case compare RulesOfTheRoad.)
23
24Occasionally a part of DressCodedForYourConvenience (when at least one side actually had a dress code).
25
26In RealLife, some dress codes have been disallowed as they were deemed racist or sexist. For example, some schools that banned [[DreadlockRasta dreadlocks]] were told by courts that this rule discriminated against Black students. In the UK, courts ruled against workplace dess codes that required women to wear makeup and reapply it throughout the day, and against workplaces that required women to wear high heels. In the US, the ACLU has defended students from schools seeking to punish them for wearing certain clothes to school. In most of the legal cases, the crux of the case is that the rules are discriminatory towards certain groups. For example, in one ACLU case, a female student was punished for wearing a tube top. The "no tube tops" rule was struck down because it only applied to female students.
27
28
29Dress codes and [[NoOSHACompliance workplace safety rules]] may overlap. For example, a warehouse worker's uniform may include heavy-duty coveralls and a construction hat. These items are not merely for appearance's sake, as they also protect the worker. [[note]]Since workplace safety clothing and safety hat requirements provide protection, workers who want to seek religious exemptions, such as Sikh men who wear a turban who request an exemption from construction hat rules, are often denied by tribunals for safety reasons. [[/note]]
30
31Contrast UnderdressedForTheOccasion and NoDressCode.
32----
33!!Examples:
34
35[[foldercontrol]]
36
37[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
38* In ''Manga/CandyCandy'', the Saint Paul BoardingSchool has two different uniforms: white clothes for the normal weekdays plus Saturday, black ones for Sunday. A recently transferred Candy gets in problems when [[UnderdressedForTheOccasion she shows up in her first Sunday at school in the white one]].
39* In ''Manga/CaseClosed'', Natsuki Koshimizu shows up in a SailorFuku and says that she took a long time preparing for the [[spoiler: fake]] Detectives Koshien show because she's from a school that has a very strict dress code.
40* In ''Literature/ACertainMagicalIndex'', girls from Tokiwadai Middle School are required to wear their uniform at all times, even outside of school. Mikoto wears ModestyShorts under her skirt since it's too short for her.
41[[/folder]]
42
43[[folder:Comic Strips]]
44* ''ComicStrip/{{Dilbert}}'' likes to mock these once in a while.
45** In one strip, Wally and Dilbert show up on a Friday in [[strike:leisure suits]] bell bottoms. PointyHairedBoss sends them back for abusing the concept of casual Fridays.
46** Here's [[http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1231/534552072_8a4c847a11.jpg?v=0 another one]].
47** And the Dilbert book ''Casual Day has Gone Too Far''.
48* ''ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}'' had a '70s storyline in which Peppermint Patty was suspended for violating the school dress code, namely wearing sandals.
49* In a ''ComicStrip/CalvinAndHobbes'' strip:
50-->'''Calvin:''' I saw a sign on a restaurant door that said "No shirt, no shoes, no service." But it didn't say anything about pants! If I went in wearing shoes and a shirt but no pants, they'd have to serve me!\
51'''Hobbes:''' They'd probably serve you with a court summons.\
52'''Calvin:''' ''[taking off his pants]'' C'mon, let's see if Mom will take us out for dinner!
53* ''ComicStrip/BeetleBailey'':
54** [[MsFanservice Miss Buxley]] often flouts the office dress code. PVT Blips has remarked that [[DirtyOldMan General Halftrack]] won't say anything about her pants being too tight because [[DistractedByTheSexy it's hard to speak with your tongue hanging out]].
55** In one strip, Miss Buxley wears a matching mini-skirt and cropped top to work and explains to PVT Blips why she's wearing that outfit:
56--->'''PVT Blips:''' Isn't that a little brief for the office?\
57'''Miss Buxley:''' Well, it's too warm to wear much.
58** In [[http://art.cafimg.com/images/Category_7952/subcat_26925/PhQRinc6_0211152219351.jpg this strip]], she [[WalkingSwimsuitScene wears a bikini]] to the office.
59* ''ComicStrip/ForBetterOrForWorse'': April finds a loophole in her school's uniform dress code when she notes that knee length socks are compulsory, but that it does not specify colour. She proceeds to buy the brightest rainbow striped socks she can find.
60* ''ComicStrip/{{Retail}}'': Grumbel's dress code came up a few times in the early years of the strip, mainly in the context of Cooper trying to circumvent it, and how much stricter the shoe department's dress code was compared to the stockroom's. Eventually, Grumbel's just decided to institute uniforms for everyone.
61* A one panel strip in ''Magazine/{{Dragon}}'' showed an irritated peasant outside an inn that clearly cartered exclusively to adventurers, since it had a sign saying "No sword, no shield, no service."
62[[/folder]]
63
64[[folder:Fan Works]]
65* In ''Fanfic/OfBloodAndSteel'', [[Anime/GirlsUndPanzer Riko "Erwin" Matsumoto]] decides not to wear her signature hat and jacket, lest she run afoul of her new American school's dress code. This is despite the fact that she wore both of them in clear violation of Oarai's uniform policy.
66* ''Fanfic/PennySavesPaldea'': Penny is puzzled that Naranja Academy's dress code forbids students from wearing Pokemon-shaped backpacks but allows them to wear helmets that completely obscure their faces.
67* ''The Sealed Palace'' (''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOcarinaOfTime'' mod): The sign's slogan to the Zora shop mentions a policy that denies service to those who wear neither a shirt nor shoes even though the Zora shop keeper wears literally nothing.
68[[/folder]]
69
70[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
71* The first thing [[ByTheBookCop Joe Friday]] does in ''Film/{{Dragnet}}'' when meeting his new partner "Pep" Streebeck (who was working undercover before being reassigned and is still dressed like a homeless man) is recite, from memory, the LAPD regulations regarding proper attire and grooming for a robbery/homicide detective.
72* In ''Film/MrHollandsOpus'', there is a scene where the principal sees that two girls are wearing skirts that are too short, so he sends them home.
73* In ''Film/MyCousinVinny'', Vinny gets in trouble with the judge because his clothes don't match what the judge feels is appropriate for the court.
74* ''Film/WinterKills'' has a scene where Nick meets with his girlfriend Yvette at a swank NYC hotel restaurant. When the maître d' refuses to seat them, because Yvette is wearing a pantsuit and the restaurant has a strict policy prohibiting this, she complies by taking her pants off on the spot (a RefugeInAudacity move that was supposedly inspired by a real-life incident involving '60s socialite Nan Kempner).
75[[/folder]]
76
77[[folder:Literature]]
78* ''Literature/TheBerenstainBears'': The Big Chapter Book "And the Dress Code" revolves around one; the plot starts when the annual run of new spring fashions (or "rad clothes") starts getting out of hand at Bear Country School, in part out of rebellion after SternTeacher Miss Glitch orders Queenie [=McBear=] to go home and change due to disapproving her choice of clothing (a very short miniskirt) despite only being on hall duty and ''not'' being Queenie's teacher, and not even sending her to the principal's office first. Vice-Principal Grizzmeyer, who becomes acting principal while Principal Honeycomb is out of town on school-related business, fully supports Miss Glitch because he also disapproves of the rad clothes, and institutes a dress code specifically aimed at banning them, along with roping other adults outside the school into the movement against them. When the cubs turn to LoopholeAbuse to get past the rules, he keeps updating it to try and close the loopholes, until it boils down to "Any cub who shows up in clothes ''I'' don't approve of will be sent home, no exceptions". The cubs respond by threatening to refuse to come to school unless he backs down. Finally, some other adults persuade both sides to agree to debate, which the cubs win handily via revealing the three lead adults in the anti-rad movement [[IWasQuiteAFashionVictim were no better in their youth]]. After the anti-rad group concedes, Principal Honeycomb reveals he's returned early and declares an end to the dress code, along with instituting casual Fridays, which satisfies the students and leads them to tone down the clothes of their own free will.
79* In Marianne Curley's ''Literature/GuardiansOfTime'' series, one of the signs that chaos is overtaking the world is that the dress code at the protagonists' high school gets abolished.
80* In the ''Literature/HonorHarrington'' series the standard court costume imposed by tradition on the Manticoran nobility during formal events, having been created by a society with essentially ''de facto'' gender equality, is unisex and includes such things as tight brightly striped pants which look unfortunate on people without the physique to pull it off and mildly ridiculous otherwise. Duchess Harrington herself, choosing to exploit her title from the planet Grayson as an excuse, decides to wear a much more comfortable and fashionable looking dress (Grayson having a more "traditional" view of women and fashion), this causing a minor social uproar when Queen Elizabeth III decides that's a damn fine idea.
81* In ''Literature/ThePrincessDiaries'', Mia mentions her school dress code here and there, such as complaining when the AlphaBitch blatantly violates it by wearing her boyfriend's shorts under her skirt, or complaining about how they can't tie their uniform shirts into midriff tops like Music/BritneySpears.
82* In ''Literature/TheSwordOfTruth'' series, length of hair on women designates social standing. The most important woman in the Midlands--the Mother Confessor--has the longest hair, and it's socially (and in some places, legally) unacceptable to have hair any longer than hers.
83* In ''Literature/TheWeeFreeMen'', the Nac Mac Feegle are renowned for their ability to go anywhere, including conceptual realms and other people's dreamscapes. When Tiffany is nearly trapped in a Fairyland dream of a fancy party, however, it takes them a while to show up, because the dream won't let them in unless they're in evening dress.
84[[/folder]]
85
86[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
87* ''Series/LittleHouseOnThePrairie'': The Season 7 episode "Goodbye, Mrs. Wilder," sees snobbish temporary {{Schoolmarm}} Mrs. Oleson demand – not suggest or request, '''''demand''''' – a dress code for the students – a white button-down shirt, ties, slacks and dress shoes, all to assert her authority. Uncaring that most families are from farming backgrounds could not afford expensive uniforms, and poo-pooing the notion that Walnut Grove School was not a large private or boarding school – hoping to draw more business to the Mercantile (since it was the only dry good store in town and it would be the point of delivery for the uniforms). The school did not have a specifically-written dress code, although it was expected they'd dress appropriately.
88* ''Series/LeaveItToBeaver'': Beaver learns why it is inappropriate to wear a sweatshirt with a large, grotesque monster printed on the front – and as a result, why the (unstated) dress code had the expectation that students would dress appropriately – in Season 4's "Sweatshirt Monsters."
89* ''Series/{{NCIS}}'' has [[TheLabRat Lab Rat]]/{{Perky Goth}} Abby wearing clothing that ranges from stereotypical Goth to {{Stripperiffic}}. When called out on it and forced to wear normal office attire, she ends up in a great deal of emotional distress and loses some of her brilliance. Naturally, PapaWolf Gibbs stands up for her and she is allowed to revert to her...less than business casual wardrobe.
90* An ''Series/AllyMcBeal'' episode has a judge ordering Ally to stop donning her trademark miniskirts in court. When she refuses, he has her jailed for contempt.
91* One ''Series/LawAndOrderSpecialVictimsUnit'' episode has a (male) judge chewing ADA Casey Novak out for wearing pants in court and ordering her to wear a skirt in the future. She then proceeds to [[Awesome/LawAndOrderSpecialVictimsUnit kick his ass]]. [[FieryRedhead Casey Novak, everybody.]]
92** The whole point of the episode is said judge's "traditional" (i.e. sexist) views on women in society, and how Novak is able to reveal the ways he lets those views affect his judgment in court. For example, a married housewife is automatically assumed to be a good person, despite the evidence that she tends to shake her baby; on the other hand, he convicts a single mother of killing her baby mostly because he sees her as little more than a slut.
93* ''Series/TheGoodWife'' has an episode where a male judge takes Alica to task for wearing pants in the courtroom. In a later scene, she encounters him again - now wearing a skirt - and sarcastically asks if it's short enough.
94* The late-'60s high school drama ''Series/{{Room 222}}'' had an episode centering around a student challenging the school dress code.
95* In ''Series/TheFreshPrinceOfBelAir'', Will would occasionally find loopholes in his high school's dress code, such as wearing his school blazer inside-out, or tying his necktie on his forehead.
96* The U.S. version of ''Series/{{The Office|US}}'' had a casual Friday episode.
97** In "New Boss", [[TyrantTakesTheHelm Charles Miner]] clashes with Jim and Dwight over their attire.
98* In season 10 of ''Series/{{Degrassi|TheNextGeneration}}'' the school introduces uniforms ''[[SuddenSchoolUniform in the middle of the school year]]'', in response to a number of incidents. A far cry from ''Series/DegrassiJuniorHigh'' where they didn't even have a ''wardrobe'' and the characters' clothes were the actors' own.
99* In an episode of ''Series/LittlePeopleBigWorld'', the Roloffs are preparing for Molly's middle school graduation. They don't check the dress code right away, and have to scramble to find a new dress for Molly because they didn't immediately check the dress code and realize the straps on her dress were too narrow.
100* Spoofed in the opening segment of ''Film/TheDeadlyMantis'' episode of ''Series/MysteryScienceTheater3000'', where Servo announces it's "Business Casual Day" on the SOL and cites Mike for alleged violations of the dress code, despite Mike's protestations that they aren't a business.
101* On ''Series/SexAndTheCity'', Miranda and her coworker dressed in such a way as to kill the newly-implemented casual Friday.
102[[/folder]]
103
104[[folder:Pro Wrestling]]
105* [[Wrestling/StevieRichards Right to]] [[Wrestling/{{Ivory}} Censor]] all wore [[LightIsNotGood white shirts]] despite being heels.
106[[/folder]]
107
108[[folder:Radio]]
109* ''Radio/OurMissBrooks'': In "Dress Code Protest", Mr. Conklin imposes a dress code after the students celebrate "Spirit Week" by wearing outrageous and mismatched clothing. Miss Brooks refers to the "celebration" as a "Malevolent Mardi Gras."
110* In a series of sketches on ''The Creator/LennyHenry'' show involving a {{Bouncer}} acting as security in places other than nightclubs, and failing to recognise that the rules are different, one of his foibles is refusing entrance to anyone wearing trainers.
111[[/folder]]
112
113[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
114* ''TabletopGame/WarhammerFantasy'': Bretonnia has complicated sumptuary laws that determine what people can wear (mostly yet another way of keeping peasants downtrodden). It's mentioned that some nobles pull a BatmanGambit on social climbers by granting them permission to wear a certain color, in order to mock the poor sap who's sure to now dress only in that color.
115* ''TabletopGame/VampireTheRequiem'' has colours for each clan, with two different dress codes- the Florentine and Mexican codes, the Florentine code dictating the colour of sashes
116** [[VampiresAreSexGods Daeva]]: Red and gold sash (Florentine), Green (Mexican)
117** [[VoluntaryShapeshifting Gangrel]]: Red and brown sash (Florentine), Yellow (Mexican)
118** [[PsychicPowers Mekhet]]: Indigo and silver sash (Florentine), Black (Mexican)
119** [[LooksLikeOrlock Nosferatu]]: Black and green sash (Florentine), White (Mexican)
120** [[VampireMonarch Ventrue]]: Purple and gold sash (Florentine), Red (Mexican)
121[[/folder]]
122
123[[folder:Video Games]]
124* In ''VideoGame/ANNOMutationem'', Ann heads to [[CoolestClubEver Nocturne Maze]] to search for an informant, only to get blocked by security for her casual outfit. [[CovertPervert Ayane]] is more than eager to show Ann a nearby clothing shop where the shopkeeper and her three assistants get Ann into the store's best dress.
125* One of the smaller "offenses" in Rockstar's ''VideoGame/{{Bully}}'' is to break the dress code. By itself, the ping on your WantedMeter won't even get the power-tripping prefects doing anything more than yelling at you, but if you commit other infractions, it can push it over a dangerous line.
126* In ''VideoGame/ProfessorLaytonAndTheLastSpecter'': In the ''London Life'' game, your character will not be allowed inside the classier establishments of Little London unless his or her outfit has a sufficient Formality score. The way the system works, you can get away with stuff like wearing a baseball cap and sunglasses in a fancy restaurant just so long as the rest of your outfit is nice enough to make up for it.
127* ''Franchise/SlyCooper'':
128** ''VideoGame/Sly2BandOfThieves'': In "A Starry Eyed Encounter", Sly is denied entry to attend Rajan's ballroom until he's wearing a tuxedo. With the mission being to sneak into the nearby guesthouse and search for formal wear.
129** ''VideoGame/Sly3HonorAmongThieves'': In "Flight of Fancy", everyone is required to wear pilot caps and jackets whenever they are inside the hotel lobby, due to the hotel being the main venue for the aerial dogfighting competition. Outside though, they can wear their normal attire.
130* The school's dress code in ''VideoGame/YandereSimulator'' is mentioned mostly to showcase that, in a last ditch effort to boost enrollment at Akademi, the Headmaster is relaxing it by a ''lot''.
131[[/folder]]
132
133[[folder:Visual Novels]]
134* Amanda and Kathy from ''VisualNovel/DaughterForDessert'' wear uniforms to work.
135* Subverted in ''VisualNovel/DoubleHomework''. The summer school class wears school uniforms, but Amy is given special permission to wear a hoodie for “personal branding” reasons.
136[[/folder]]
137
138[[folder:Web Comics]]
139* ''Webcomic/{{Bug|Martini}}'' shows us some [[http://www.bugmartini.com/comic/dress-code/ variations on casual Friday.]]
140* ''WebComic/ElGoonishShive'': Moperville North implements a strict dress code after the principal catches "[[InsaneTrollLogic a fight caused by students wearing opposing gang symbols]]" (actually just Tedd poking fun at Susan's ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'' shirt). ''No one'' is happy about the uniforms, especially Susan who begins a protest over the sexist female outfits (they have a mandatory skirt and superfluous vest). The protest stretches over multiple arcs and [[ArcFatigue five real-life years]], until the principal unceremoniously removes the dress code after Susan shows up on the news - [[ShaggyDogStory not because of the sexism, but because of the extra laundry every kid had to do]].
141* In ''Webcomic/LatchkeyKingdom'', Hilla Treasure Co's "No shoes, no shirt, no service" sign frequently causes inconvenience for the many shirtless barbarians and adventurers drawn to the kingdom's treasures.
142* ''Webcomic/UrbanJungle'' asks [[http://www.urbanjunglecomic.com/?p=314 how this applies in an office full of animals]].
143[[/folder]]
144
145[[folder:Web Original]]
146* Parodied in ''Website/CollegeHumor'''s [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FLZ8L6SZmaA Problem]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FC85vgHCmM With]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4_QhF5HYdS4 Jeggings]] series.
147* Bizarre dress codes are a staple of transgender fiction, as seen on sites like [[http://www.fictionmania.tv/ FictionMania]]. Usually, a male character finds himself in an all-female workplace with a dress code that doesn't account for two genders, and thus requires things like skirt, pantyhose, makeup, etc. After being DraggedIntoDrag, adopting a WholesomeCrossdresser lifestyle (and in more extreme cases, dragged into [[EasySexChange more than that]]), the protagonist often finds that many of the "women" in the office are, or were, also men.
148* Parodied in "Magiconomy" by WebVideo/ShinyObjectsVideos. Even destructive forces of dark magic need to wear a tie in the office.
149[[/folder]]
150
151[[folder:Western Animation]]
152* In ''WesternAnimation/BigCityGreens'' episode "No Service", Cricket's habit of not wearing shoes is tested when he cannot go into a store because of its "No shirt, no shoes, no service" policy.
153* A classic Creator/CartoonNetwork bumper has [[WesternAnimation/TheFlintstones Fred Flintstone]], WesternAnimation/HuckleberryHound, WesternAnimation/QuickDrawMcGraw, and [[WesternAnimation/IAmWeasel Weasel]] being refused service at a mini-mart because of its dress code.
154-->'''Fred:''' So you're saying I can't buy shoes because I don't ''have'' shoes?
155* ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'': Gavin mentions that he was not allowed in a store unless he gets clothes on. He promptly stole the outfit he wore durring "The Richest Duck in the World" from another guy in order to enter it.
156* The 2013 ''WesternAnimation/{{Mickey Mouse|2013}}'' short "[[Recap/MickeyMouseS1E1NoService No Service]]" has Goofy's Snack Shack, which has a No Shirt, No Shoes, No Service policy. Since Mickey doesn't wear a shirt, nor does Donald wear shoes, Mickey is forced to surrender his clothes to Donald and [[Main/NakedPeopleTrappedOutside stay outside naked]] while Donald orders the food.
157* In ''WesternAnimation/SamuraiJack2017'', [[MusicalAssassin Scaramouch]] can't get on a boat because shoes, shirt, and a body (which he's lacking) are required for entry. He tries to get on acting as a dog's head, only to find that dogs aren't allowed on either.
158* At the beginning of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' episode [[Recap/TheSimpsonsS7E4BartSellsHisSoul "Bart Sells His Soul"]], the First Church of Springfield has a sign reading "No Shoes, No Shirt, No Salvation".
159* Usually averted in ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'' (mostly because Patrick, who wears neither a shirt nor shoes is one of the Krusty Krab's regular customers, not to mention, most of the characters on the show don't wear shoes), but the episode, "The Algae's Always Greener" has Spongebob scream, "No shirt, no shoes, no service!" while firing a cannon armed with clothing at a naked Mr. Krabs.
160* ''WesternAnimation/WeBareBears'': In "Fashion Bears", the trio wants to visit a new bubble tea shop, but it has a "no shoes, no shirt, no service" policy.
161[[/folder]]
162
163[[folder:Real Life]]
164* The court of UsefulNotes/TsaristRussia had [[http://www.alexanderpalace.org/palace/ctcostume.html a dress code]], which included requiring ladies to wear the {{Pimped Out Dress}}es with the distinctive sleeves and [[CoolCrown tiaras]]. Many other royal courts in the 19th century had their own codes as well. In a nutshell, this was the ErmineCapeEffect being [[EnforcedTrope enforced]], rather than just as an image.
165* One of Jane Seymour's newly appointed maids of honor caught all kinds of grief over her clothes. They were too French, she didn't have the right headress, and her girdle didn't have the regulation two hundred pearls!
166* There were the "Sumptuary Laws", which dictated what materials people of a certain rank were allowed to wear. Apparently this was enacted by kings and queens tired of people of lower rank dressing better than them. More importantly, at the time social rank determined how the law treated you, so trying to pass out for a higher class than you actually were was tantamount to serious fraud. One of the laws was [[PrettyInMink what kind of fur one could wear]]. Ermine was largely associated with royalty already due to [[RequisiteRoyalRegalia their robes and capes]], but at that time royalty had it exclusive by law.
167* England, circa the 17th century onwards, the length of one's wig determined one's social status in polite society. This still remains with English law: judges wear longer, full wigs than the barristers (lawyers) who wear short, abbreviated ones--although because nothing is simple in English law or custom, the Court of Appeal wears short wigs and the Supreme Court (formerly the Appellate Committee of the House of Lords) doesn't even wear robes, sitting instead in suits. Also, judges and King's Counsel ([=KCs=] for short, senior barristers who have been formally recognised for their skill; the title becomes Queen's Counsel or QC when the monarch is female) wear silk robes and stockings in court, while junior barristers wear other materials. This requirement has led to the process of becoming a KC being called "taking silk" and [=KCs=] being referred to as "silks".
168* Almost everyone in an American court is required to meet a dress code, including the jury in many cases (which is printed on the letter sent to jurors). Jury dress codes are usually much laxer, however; typically, jurors can get away with wearing street clothes as long as they cover everything up and aren't offensive. Lawyers, on the other hand, generally have to show up in proper business attire: that means a suit and tie with proper shoes and socks for men, and a pants suit or skirt suit for women. Failure to follow these rules can result in getting chewed out by the judge; many judges will refuse to hear argument from an improperly attired attorney (unless the attorney has a ''very'' good excuse[[note]]One lawyer just barely got away with the excuse that his child had vomited on his suit coat shortly before the proceedings and was permitted to appear wearing the suit without the coat; the judge commented that certain other judges in the same courthouse would not have been so lenient.[[/note]]), and some even keep stores of commonly-forgotten items (e.g. ties) ready in the courtroom for the use of errant lawyers. On one widely-reported occasion, a judge in Indiana [[http://www.abajournal.com/news/article/judge_orders_lawyer_to_put_on_his_socks/ got into a tiff with a lawyer about the lawyer's habit of dressing down--including not wearing socks--in court]], and even went to the trouble of [[http://www.scribd.com/doc/238460391/Sock-memo writing a proper, official court order, with a legal memorandum, ordering the lawyer to wear socks]].
169** Historically, the restrictions were even tighter; it used to be that many courts required counsel to appear in [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morning_dress morning dress]]. American courts generally dropped this requirement over the 20th century; however, there are some traces, particularly the tradition where the U.S. Solicitor General and his/her deputies (the lawyers responsible for arguing cases in the Supreme Court on behalf of the U.S. federal government) continue to appear for oral argument in morning dress to this day.
170** Certain U.S. states have—or at least had—a dress code for taking the bar examination (the test for law graduates to be officially permitted to practice and call themselves lawyers). Virginia in particular is famous for requiring examinees to sit the full two-day exam in proper business attire (i.e. suits) to this day (as of 2022).
171* In most countries in the Middle East, you cannot enter any public place without long pants.
172* In UsefulNotes/VaticanCity, the guards enforce a strict dress code for entry to St. Peter's Basilica: [[http://saintpetersbasilica.org/Pics/SQR/DressCode-JG.jpg No bare shoulders or skirts/shorts above the knee for either men or for women]]. (It's also considered respectful for women to cover their hair.) If you're lucky enough to be called for a personal meeting with the Pope himself, the rules are even stricter; women must wear black, unless they're one of a ''very'' select group of Catholic royals who have the ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Privilege_du_blanc privilège du blanc]]'' (the right to wear white).
173* When visiting a synagogue, male visitors (and sometimes women) are asked to wear a head covering (usually a kippah, which are generally provided), regardless of if they are Jewish or not.
174* When visiting a mosque or a conservative Islamic country, women are required to cover their hair (for traditional Muslim women, this applies everywhere in public).
175* Sikhs (men and women) [[NeverBareheaded cover their hair when in public]], and carry the "[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Five_Ks Five Ks]]", including a comb, bracelet, shorts called ''kachera'', and a sword or knife called the ''kirpan''.
176* Formal parties have general dress codes depending on the type. If you see terms like "White tie dinner", "Black tie dinner", or "Cocktail party", those are all in descending degrees of formality and dress.
177* There is a 100 year old law in Paris that makes it illegal for women to wear trousers. Repeal has been proposed several times, but officials and law officers find it is simply much easier and cheaper to ignore it.
178** Law enacted: November 7, 1800. Law declared [[http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/at-last-women-of-paris-can-wear-the-trousers-legally-after-200yearold-law-is-declared-null-and-void-8480666.html null and void]]: February 4, 2013.
179* Similarly, in collections of "ridiculous old laws still on the books", you can find places in the USA where women may not wear patent leather shoes, because they might reflect their underwear.
180* The Technology Student Association has multiple levels of dress code for conferences. All true TSA'ers know exactly what constitutes Official Dress and what doesn't.
181* The WNBA and NBA have rules governing what coaches and players wear when representing their teams, both on and off court. Players usually wear team warmups or shirts to community appearances.
182** Coaches wear suits and ties. Female coaches wear pantsuits.
183** When players are injured and cannot play, they have to dress formally. In the WNBA, this sometimes leads to the exhibition of a PimpedOutDress.
184* Most auto racing series require anyone in the pit area of the track during a race (including reporters, car owners, and even the driver's significant other or spouse) to wear a full-body firesuit for safety reasons.
185* Many American public schools have a dress code, though usually more about prohibiting certain things than requiring a particular dress (e.g., no obscene shirts, no underwear showing, or no hats). The schools vary in how strictly they enforce it, although the prevalence of uniform dress codes has ratcheted up since 1997. Private and parochial schools often have much stricter dress codes up to and including uniforms. Often subverted by the students, who despite being required to wear their skirts knee-length, [[http://metronews.ca/news/toronto/36851/kilts-hiked-into-school-debate/ hem]] them into mini-skirts. Some girls who really want to piss off a teacher will wear an ankle-length skirt, follow the rest of the dress code to the letter, and then dare a teacher to tell her she's violating the dress code. Telling a girl her skirt is too long will not end well for a school district. An expensive lawsuit plus a shitload of bad publicity is where things start.
186* Some high profile incidents have hit the headlines with parents and pupils fighting back against arbitrary, archaic and just plain sexist dress codes including:
187** Failing to account for different builds - sanctioning some girls because they are bustier and fill out the same top more than others or the “fingertip” rule on shorts making an identical pair ok on a shorter girl but a violation on a taller one.
188** Reinforcing more old-fashioned rules on gender roles by putting the onus on girls to avoid wearing anything too revealing rather than teaching boys to behave respectfully regardless of how girls are dressed and by implication being stricter on girls than boys.
189** Blatantly sexist double standards in dress code enforcement, usually aimed at girls. For example, making girls stretch their arms above their heads and sanctioning them for bare midriff if their top and bottom show a gap - even if it normally wouldn't - when boys can walk around in shirts open to the navel, and boys attending Catholic schools being banned from wearing braids and earrings.
190** A complete lack of common sense in relation to the temperature and weather and the dress code - either forcing pupils to wear hot and restrictive clothing during hot weather or refusing to let them wear more in the cold.
191* IBM had one of the most stringent dress codes, requiring men to wear garters, among other things. One bit of humor in Clifford Stoll's non-fiction book ''CuckoosEgg'' is that the computer science nerds he works with mistake federal agents for IBM sales reps, because ''nobody'' else coming into the server room would ever wear a dress shirt or a tie, let alone a suit.
192* Any job that requires workers to wear uniforms, oftentimes to make employees easily identified according to their job, affiliation with the company, or rank.
193** Even without a formal uniform, most workplaces have a dress code much like a school, which regulates appropriate clothing. If employees are found in violation of the dress code, they'll be sent home to change.
194** In some cases, such as military personnel, the dress code also serves to give the wearer some protection under law: A soldier fighting without a certain minimal degree of uniform could be considered an unlawful combatant or a spy if encountered or captured by the enemy. This is incidentally why the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration has uniforms at all: One of their duties is surveying and creating navigational charts for ships to use. Doing so during time of war can be considered spying if done wearing civilian attire.
195** Journalists, such as those who work for CNN, will sometimes wear station or network-branded jackets or hats in severe weather to let other people know that they're trying to do a job and are not to be disrupted.
196** Service dogs wear vests which usually say something to the effect of "Don't distract me! I'm working!" When they're not working, they can take the vest off and basically live as pets.
197* Workplaces with an element of physical risk, such as building sites or warehouses, typically have a dress code that sets out what personal protective equipment employees and site visitors are required to wear. High-vis vests, work gloves, hard-toed boots, hard hats and harnesses are often the most common features of these. These items are mandated by OSHA (or equivalent) standards, so ignoring or circumventing the dress code on these jobs is a good way to be permanently sent home. Physically risky workplaces also tend to ''prohibit'' neckties, lest they get caught in machinery. Police and security guards generally don't wear neckties (except perhaps clip-on ones) because they could be grabbed during an altercation.
198* Businesses can enforce dress codes on the customers, but it's usually something along the lines of "must be wearing a shirt, pants, and shoes", which mostly everyone follows anyway. The rule is more for the benefit of other customers so they aren't weirded or grossed out by someone who is too revealing or could be spreading germs around. Nice restaurants can also have dress codes for guests, such as a suit jacket and tie.
199* Nightclubs often enforce a dress code to attract a certain clientele, though these codes tend to be vague, such as "dress to impress." A common standard is no jeans, t-shirts, sneakers or sportswear. BDSM and fetish clubs tend to have even stricter rules with some, such as Torture Garden, being infamous for their draconian dress codes.
200* Some cosplay conventions have dress codes, depending on the age range they're aimed at.
201** Small, family-friendly conventions tend to prohibit revealing clothing and nudity, and sometimes do not allow prop weapons, even ones that are obviously fake.
202** Larger conventions for a more adult crowd generally allow revealing clothing, but may prohibit nudity. Prop weapons are allowed, but have to pass inspection by staff to make sure they're not actually dangerous. Weapons that can cause injuries are usually banned, including live steel, real guns (even unloaded), other projectile weapons (e.g. working bows, airsoft guns), and the infamous "yaoi paddles".
203[[/folder]]

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