You can be on Entrepreneur’s cover!

Business Ultra-Casual: Would You Wear This Sweat-'Suit' to the Office? Dude, terry cloth isn't just for towels and tracksuits anymore.

By Kim Lachance Shandrow

entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Betabrand

Nothing says business like sweatpants.

That's how Betabrand feels about it, anyway. The quirky San Francisco social clothier behind the world's first RFID-blocking jeans is taking business casual to a whole new low: It's putting the 'suit' in sweatsuit.

Behold the Dress Pant Sweatpants and Sweat Suit Blazer. Put them together and you have Casual Friday every day, the ultimate slacker suit. No kidding, a business suit made of super soft French terry cloth that easily doubles for classic charcoal wool.

Related: The Stars of Shark Tank on How to Dress for Success

Yeah, it's a thing and – surprise! -- it's not ugly.

Hold the Fashion Police alarm. Betabrand's oxymoronic sweatsuit-business apparel mashup somehow doesn't scream tacky. And we say this reluctantly because we really, really don't want to like it. (Neither did Kim Jong Un, but that's another story.)

The combo's quite fetching, even kind of slick, all warm and fuzzy like your favorite pair of sweats on the inside, strictly business on the outside. Definitely not cringe-worthy, unlike last summer's short suit, which thankfully never went viral.

Business Ultra-Casual: Would You Wear This Sweat-'Suit' to the Office?

Image credit: Betabrand

Related: Can Entrepreneurs Really Wear What They Want?

The thing is, the comfy blazer passes for an actual dress blazer and the bottoms pass for actual dress pants. At least the latter did when this brave CNN reporter strutted into the newsroom sporting them. His coworkers showered him with compliments.

"Everyone thought I looked really clean," Jarrett Bellini said. "And nice. And less woke-up-in-a-gutter-y. So, the pants work. From both near and far, they look just like regular trousers, what with pockets and belt loops and that second, inside waist button that lets you know you're bein' all fancy-like."

The best part, other than chilling in sweats at the office all day "all fancy-like," is that there's zero dry cleaning required. Both pieces (sold separately), blazer and bottoms, are machine washable, tumble dry. The worst? Bellini said the pants are noticeably warm. "Not terrible. But definitely warm." Oh, and the prices are a tad overcooked, too: The pants range from $97 to $108 and the blazer clocks in at $158.

Related: The Company Turning Selfies Into Better-Fitting Bras

For you fitness fanatics who jog to work, Betabrand has your overachieving gams covered with these snazzy above-the-ankle sweat-dress pants.

If suiting up in a multi-piece getup for work is too much work for you, then you might be grown up enough to don a Suitsy, Betabrand's zippered onesie-business suit hybrid. No joke. The dude in the video below is baby-man enough to wear one. Check it out for a chuckle:

Related: Your Attire Speaks Volumes Before You Open Your Mouth

Dressy sweatpant trousers, blazers and power onesies aren't the only kooky threads the crowdfunding-based fashion retailer sells. Other gimmicky Betabrand doozies include:

  • Dress Pant Yoga Pants -- "At last, yoga pants for the office!" Because you never know when you might get the urge to spontaneously human pretzel at your desk. They had us at faux zipper.
  • Karate Casuals -- Baggy karate-inspired drawstring pants for the couch commando in all of us. Huh? We didn't know inactivity was a martial art either.
  • Shackets -- It's a shirt. It's a jacket. Wait, it's a shacket. Okay, we get it now.
  • Vajamas -- Cozy pajama tops and bottoms made from Vajisoft, a fabric "so soft and snuggable, baby bunnies feel like cacti wrapped in barbed wire by comparison." Well, okay then.
  • DiscoLab duds -- Picture blinding disco ball bling ("pure, shimmering disconium") plastered on everything from tuxedo jackets to running shorts to, yes, even yarmulkes.

Related: Professional Dress Doesn't Have to Mean Boring

Or, if you're more of a DIY type, stitch up your own custom sweatsuit business suit, like Rav Matharu did. The Clothsurgeon tailor transformed a Nike tracksuit into a dapper Swoosh suit worthy of the boardroom.

Related: How to Dress for a Business Meeting. Yes, Seriously. (Infographic)

Kim Lachance Shandrow

Former West Coast Editor

Kim Lachance Shandrow is the former West Coast editor at Entrepreneur.com. Previously, she was a commerce columnist at Los Angeles CityBeat, a news producer at MSNBC and KNBC in Los Angeles and a frequent contributor to the Los Angeles Times. She has also written for Government Technology magazine, LA Yoga magazine, the Lowell Sun newspaper, HealthCentral.com, PsychCentral.com and the former U.S. Surgeon General, Dr. C. Everett Coop. Follow her on Twitter at @Lashandrow. You can also follow her on Facebook here

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Business Solutions

Save an Extra 20% on the Ultimate Microsoft Bundle Featuring Windows 11 Pro, Office, and More

Pick up this package of popular Microsoft products for only a fraction of the price through April 16.

Business News

This Fan-Favorite Masters 2024 Item Is Still $1.50 as Tournament Menu Appears Unscathed by Inflation

The pimento cheese sandwich is a tradition almost as big as the tournament itself.

Business Solutions

Visualize Data for Better Business: MS Visio is $23.99 Through April 16

Set your team up for success with a reliable tool for creating organizational charts, diagrams, and more.

Business Solutions

Scan Easier and More Affordably with This 20% Discount

iScanner is a mobile app that makes document management, editing, and sharing easier.

Science & Technology

These Are the Top 6 AI Threats to Your Business Right Now

The modern workforce is forever changed by artificial intelligence. If you fail to understand that we will all need to learn AI to some degree, you haven't been paying attention.