First date guide
What to wear on a first date, dialed in for the date.
Upload one selfie. Tell us the venue. Get the outfit, the grooming move, and the day-of checklist that reads as intentional, not nervous.

01
The first-date problem most guides ignore
Internet advice for first-date outfits is universally bad because it assumes one type of date. A coffee at 11 AM Saturday is a different visual problem than dinner at 7 PM Friday at a mid-tier restaurant, which is a different problem than a walk through a museum at 2 PM on a Sunday. The outfit that works at one fails at the others. The fix isn't a single 'first date outfit.' The fix is reading the venue, the time, the season, and your date's likely register, and dressing one notch up from that. never two.
02
The 'one notch up' rule
Dressing exactly to the venue's register signals 'normal night.' Dressing one notch up. slightly more considered fabrics, slightly cleaner fit, slightly sharper grooming. signals 'I cared enough to think about this.' Dressing two notches up is overdressed and reads as trying too hard or as a status play. The notch matters:
- Coffee, daytime: dark denim, fitted knit or fine sweater, clean leather sneakers or loafers. Skip the t-shirt under everything; show you considered the weather.
- Drinks, evening: dark tailored jean or chino, fine-gauge knit or button-up, leather. One textural detail (chain, watch, bracelet, eyewear) that pulls focus to your face.
- Dinner at a real restaurant: chino, structured shirt, leather shoes. A blazer or overshirt makes the room read you as the host of the evening, not the guest.
- Activity (gallery, museum, bookstore): one notch up from your everyday, with the activity factored in. Comfortable shoes, layer-friendly, but each layer considered.
03
Grooming reads louder than wardrobe
On a first date, the grooming layer carries more weight than the clothing layer because it's the first thing your date's eye lands on across the table. The wins:
- Haircut three to five days out, not the day before. Settled hair reads deliberate; fresh-from-the-chair hair reads new.
- Beard / facial hair: cleaned line, even length, no patchiness on display. If you can't grow a full beard, don't try to. a deliberate 2-3 day stubble or a clean shave both read better than half-grown.
- Skin: SPF every day, a 3-step routine (cleanser, moisturizer, SPF) starting two weeks before. Hydrated skin photographs better and reads rested at the restaurant table.
- Brows: clean the strays. You don't need shaped brows; you need brows that aren't competing for your eyes' attention.
04
Presence cues that matter at the table
Wardrobe and grooming get you to the seat. What happens after is on you:
- Phone face-down on the table the whole time. Visible phone destroys read.
- Eyes forward, slightly tilted head when listening. Don't fight the silence. let it sit, then ask the next question.
- Posture lifted. Don't lean back; lean slightly forward. Signals interest without aggression.
- Pay attention to the staff. How you treat them is one of the loudest signals you'll give about who you are.
05
What Fix Style gives you
The Event Pack reads your venue, your day, your style direction, and gives back two outfit choices specific to that exact first date, a grooming timeline backed up from the date, a 'do not make this about' line (e.g. don't make it about money, don't make it about how busy you are), a presence cheat sheet for the actual meal or activity, and six identity-preserving photos of you in both outfits. Look at the photos, pick the one that feels like you, ship it.
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