[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"news-5410-EN":3},{"images":4,"body":14,"pk":15,"news_id":16,"tile_alt":6,"published":17,"tags":18,"tile_image":7,"title":19,"permalink":20,"ex_news":21,"ex_artist":21,"posted":22,"summary":23},[5,8,11],{"alt":6,"filename":7},"Corporate dress-code for The Wall Street Journal","blog_5410_638070329690935003.jpg",{"alt":9,"filename":10},"Débora Islas creates a corporate dress-code illustration for the Wall Street Journal","blog_5410_638070329785831532.jpg",{"alt":12,"filename":13},"Artwork of corporate dress-code by Debora Islas","blog_5410_638070329863408823.jpg","\u003Cp>The article is a 'Guide to Casual Back-to-Work Wear for Men' which strikes the balance between relaxed and professional, stating&nbsp;\"...\u003Cem>Sales of men&rsquo;s formal clothing dropped by 74% globally between March and June 2020, according to GlobalData Retail.&nbsp;But the suit has a bigger problem: In the late 20th century it became a symbol of men bound to the corporate rat race. Ever since, these men&mdash;unwilling to be defined by their day jobs&mdash;have put their money into what they wear outside of work, splurging on expensive hoodies and branded sneakers. All the innovation has been in athleisure.\"\u003C\u002Fem>\u003C\u002Fp>\r\n\u003Cp>D&eacute;bora's refined man evokes charisma and control and supports the idea of suiting up as a positive option for an office environment.\u003C\u002Fp>","news",5410,"2022-12-19T06:00:00","#editorial#drawing#realistic#fashion#clothing#pencil#men#newspaper#professional#office#workplace#debora islas#","Suiting Up","\u002Fnews\u002F5410\u002Fsuiting_up",false,"2022-12-19T06:00:00#5410","The Wall Street Journal commission \u003Ca href=\"\u002FDeboraIslas\">Débora Islas \u003C\u002Fa> for an artwork to illustrate their corporate dress-code feature."]