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AppleHack23

macrumors member
Original poster
Apr 7, 2010
88
0
New Jersey
In every event I've seen with Steve Jobs, he's always wearing a black turtle neck shirt, a pair of blue jeans, and white shoes with white socks. I've watched many many videos, and everyone that I've seen, has him wearing the same thing. Even since his 2001 announcement of the first iPod, he was wearing that. Is this all he has? I mean really, go out and watch some of the event videos, and look at his clothes. My mom noticed this at the announcement of the iPad, when I showed her an iPhone event video a few minutes before. I think its really strange.
 

mickbab

macrumors 65816
Sep 13, 2008
1,136
4
Sydney, Australia
If Steve ever wore something different to a keynote (or anywhere for that matter, he was wearing the same clothes when seen with Eric Schmidt), there would be a riot from Apple fanboys across the world.

:p

It's just tradition I suppose. It's how everyone knows and remembers every Apple keynote.
 

Schtumple

macrumors 601
Jun 13, 2007
4,905
131
benkadams.com
If Steve wore anything different the black turtle neck and "older father figure blue" jeans industry would go bust. Simple. Steves keeping the economy going.
 

chrisbb

macrumors member
Nov 7, 2008
78
48
I do understand what you are saying, but I do have a few comments.

Steve is there to present his new ideas/concepts, not to introduce a new Apple line of fashion. The viewers/audience should be looking at the screen/projector not what Steve etc is wearing.

I do agree though, a darker wash of jeans, a new pair of brown shoes (preferably loafers/slip ons with no heel). He could wear a V-neck with a shirt under it etc... very simple yet would make a huge impression :)

****, I could style Steve for his keynotes!
Please take note apple, thanks :)
 

rorschach

macrumors 68020
Jul 27, 2003
2,299
1,977
And how many CEOs just wear the same suit all the time? Many/most. Same thing except Jobs wears the same shirt and jeans.
 

nerd

macrumors member
May 15, 2004
92
0
Everything I've read leads me to believe Steve has sort of a spartan lifestyle. He wears the same "uniform", at one point he lived in a house with no furniture, he hates buttons (on mice and shirts apparently), etc. It's the Tao of Steve. I think it's kind of cool.
 

thegoldenmackid

macrumors 604
Dec 29, 2006
7,770
6
dallas, texas
500x_stevehoodie.jpg


If you look at pictures from him visiting the Apple Store over the weekend, you'd notice he had ripped jeans and a sweatshirt.

...just saying.
 

*LTD*

macrumors G4
Feb 5, 2009
10,703
1
Canada
Everything I've read leads me to believe Steve has sort of a spartan lifestyle. He wears the same "uniform", at one point he lived in a house with no furniture, he hates buttons (on mice and shirts apparently), etc. It's the Tao of Steve. I think it's kind of cool.

It's Buddhist, and definitely Zen Buddhism. Minimalism, elegance, and naturally flowing simplicity.

Taoism is very similar. In fact Chinese Buddhism used elements from their own Taoism to help it along, creating Ch'an Buddhism.
 

MisterMe

macrumors G4
Jul 17, 2002
10,709
69
USA
re: As rich as Steve Jobs is, you'd think he has more than 1 pair of clothes.

Just so you never say anything like this again:

Pair means two. You may have a pair of shoes, a pair of socks, a pair of garters, a pair of cuff-links, a pair of pants, and a pair of drawers. In the case of pants and drawers, the presumably the legs account for the pair. You cannot have pair of shirts, belts, ties, etc. You most certainly cannot have a pair of clothes. When referring to clothes, an ensemble was traditionally referred to as a suit of clothes. This phrase is today somewhat archaic. Today we refer Steve's worn jeans, black turtleneck, and tennis shoes as an outfit.
 

ScottishDuck

macrumors 6502a
Feb 17, 2010
663
985
Argyll, Scotland
It's Buddhist, and definitely Zen Buddhism. Minimalism, elegance, and naturally flowing simplicity.

Taoism is very similar. In fact Chinese Buddhism used elements from their own Taoism to help it along, creating Ch'an Buddhism.

Buddhism is inherently anti-materialist. I can't say steve falls under that category.
 

dukebound85

macrumors Core
Jul 17, 2005
19,167
4,165
5045 feet above sea level
Just so you never say anything like this again:

Pair means two. You may have a pair of shoes, a pair of socks, a pair of garters, a pair of cuff-links, a pair of pants, and a pair of drawers. In the case of pants and drawers, the presumably the legs account for the pair. You cannot have pair of shirts, belts, ties, etc. You most certainly cannot have a pair of clothes. When referring to clothes, an ensemble was traditionally referred to as a suit of clothes. This phrase is today somewhat archaic. Today we refer Steve's worn jeans, black turtleneck, and tennis shoes as an outfit.

semantics is overrated. we know what he meant

seriously, the guy should wear other things. it is kinda weird. i mean really...it is
 

unid

macrumors regular
Feb 24, 2009
195
0
Traffic_island_bay
It's Buddhist, and definitely Zen Buddhism. Minimalism, elegance, and naturally flowing simplicity.

Taoism is very similar. In fact Chinese Buddhism used elements from their own Taoism to help it along, creating Ch'an Buddhism.



Zen is not an outfit.
SJ+turtleneck+jeans+trainers=zen
seems a very adlib sum to me.
Please adjust your Aritostlean language.

Why did the bodhidharma go to China?
Why didn't Steve go to Shenzhen?
 

tomaki

macrumors newbie
Apr 9, 2010
24
25
minimalism

I've never been a guy who likes to think what he wears. To me clothes are pretty much irrelevant as long as they keep me warm and look decent.

I think that applies to Steve too. He just doesn't care about clothes very much, so he has selected a few comfy and stylish enough clothes that are enough for him. By using the same outfit every day he has completely gotten rid of the problems of choosing what to wear today.

The same search for simplicity seems to define his life in other areas too. Like the pic from his apartment where he only had a hifi-system with huge speakers, a collection of LP records, a lamp and a pillow to sit on. Same thing with the design of macs, osx, iphone etc.

Living like this is called 'minimalist lifestyle', so if you're interested to know more about it, google it.
 

eastercat

macrumors 68040
Mar 3, 2008
3,323
7
PDX
I've read of fashion designers who wear a uniform everyday, so they don't have to use their brain to decide on what to wear. They would rather concentrate on the clothing they design. I figure that's the same case here, in addition to the minimalist aesthetic.
Personally, I'd rather prefer if Steve Jobs concentrate on making great Apple products than whether his outfit is sufficiently fashionable.

I've never been a guy who likes to think what he wears. To me clothes are pretty much irrelevant as long as they keep me warm and look decent.

I think that applies to Steve too. He just doesn't care about clothes very much, so he has selected a few comfy and stylish enough clothes that are enough for him. By using the same outfit every day he has completely gotten rid of the problems of choosing what to wear today.

The same search for simplicity seems to define his life in other areas too. Like the pic from his apartment where he only had a hifi-system with huge speakers, a collection of LP records, a lamp and a pillow to sit on. Same thing with the design of macs, osx, iphone etc.

Living like this is called 'minimalist lifestyle', so if you're interested to know more about it, google it.
 

*LTD*

macrumors G4
Feb 5, 2009
10,703
1
Canada
Zen is not an outfit.
SJ+turtleneck+jeans+trainers=zen
seems a very adlib sum to me.
Please adjust your Aritostlean language.

Why did the bodhidharma go to China?
Why didn't Steve go to Shenzhen?

Zen is actually, anything. Nothing and everything. It is infinitely malleable.
 

unid

macrumors regular
Feb 24, 2009
195
0
Traffic_island_bay
It's Buddhist, and definitely Zen Buddhism

Zen is actually, anything. Nothing and everything. It is infinitely malleable.

So to fuse your assertion/alleged insight into a
clear phrase presumably I should conclude that...

'SJ style is definitely actually, anything. Nothing and everything. It is infinitely malleable'.

which not only sounds inaccurate,

but would tend to prove the point that there is no meaningful connection between Zen and SJ outfit choice.

Check what Tomaki said he has had a deeper satori about steves' wardrobe.
 

*LTD*

macrumors G4
Feb 5, 2009
10,703
1
Canada
'SJ style is definitely actually, anything. Nothing and everything. It is infinitely malleable'.

which not only sounds inaccurate,

but would tend to prove the point that there is no meaningful connection between Zen and SJ outfit choice.

Precisely. You're beginning to get it.
 
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