Ollywog wrote:
Everyone is different, but not every one of a person's sensitivities will be unique. If enough people share their difficulties and how they deal with them, many readers will find one or two things that are applicable.
Fair.
Since it's winter clothes you're looking for, I'll focus on those.
First, a good jacket is a must if the temperature drops below 0 C. Often before it too, but definitely when it falls that low. What a good jacket means for
me is that it shouldn't end at my hips. Instead, it should reach at least over my butt, and it certainly doesn't hurt if it's longer than that. The reason is that if it ends at hips, the area below can feel a lot colder than the area above, especially when sitting outside, and that's no good when it comes to my sensory issues.
When it comes to keeping your feet warm, if you can't find comfortable winter shoes, having socks that are warm enough, or several pairs of socks at once, in sneakers works as long as there isn't too much rain or snow. But having good winter shoes is definitely better.
And for legs, for a long time I couldn't wear stockings or leggings or the like because the former was (and still is) hard to move in, and the later follows the shape of one's body closely which used to be very uncomfortable for me, so instead of having those under my regular pants, I wore the kind of outdoor pants over them that little kids who like to play in mud usually wear. I checked the word for them with google translate and it says "dungarees." Is that an actual word for outdoor pants?
With long sleeved shirts, I prefer the ones that have buttons or zippers. The ones that don't have to be pulled on over the head and that feels uncomfortable for me, more so than with t-shirts since those usually have a bigger neck opening.
...Is this the kind of thing you were asking about or am I rambling about irrelevant things?