I think everything depends on the intended "audience." Where are you? Who's there, that you want to convince that you are completely ordinary and non-suspicious and not worthy of attention? Maybe wearing a t-shirt with a heavy metal band logo on it and skinny jeans is what blends in. Maybe it's wearing a suit and tie. Maybe you're in a rural area where on any given day year-round a third of the males will be wearing some kind of cammies, either military or hunting stuff, year round. And if you're a honkey there are places where every eye is going to be on you regardless of how you dress, though those tend to be places no sane man wants to go. My point is that everything depends on where you are.
And there are things you can do things about, and things maybe you can't. There are places where being a white male of any age who's not a lispy skinnyfat twink with a nose ring and pink hair, or carrying around a fifty-pound beer baby, is going to stand out, even without a buzzcut and Oakleys. And visible tattoos always, always scream "hey everybody look at me, LOOK AT ME LOOK AT ME," even when they aren't Punisher skulls and crossed rifles. Though maybe if that's you, you can mitigate this a little by dressing to blend in, maybe with loose clothes that don't show off your rippling pecs quite so much. My point is that dressing to blend in means different things in different places. Behaving to blend in means different things in different places, though not speaking unless spoken to, and smiling and nodding as you pass silently by, will probably get fewer heads rotating to stare at you than sperging out at the checkout lady for miscounting your change.
The point is not to stand out. The point is not to draw attention to yourself. There is more to it than how you dress.
>>14547
Based.