Also from a pretty snowy cold place, and I second this stuff. As for leggings, I often will double up, with regular leggings underneath and then knit leggings over top with whatever skirt or dress I feel like that day. It is as warm as you can get short of a snowsuit, just as warm as wearing leggings under pants (which is what I do otherwise).
And: dust yourself off as soon as you get in the building. If it snows on you, try to get as much snow off as possible after you get somewhere warm, because the snow will melt and make you wet, which is exceedingly unpleasant.
I think unless they're getting several inches of snow that day you can wear heels without switching to snow boots. Places that get a lot of snow are good at clearing off sidewalks quickly, so unless you hike across fields, you shouldn't be anywhere with heavy drifts of snow. And if there IS a snowstorm that day, I doubt anyone will think less of you for any wardrobe malfunctions due to the weather.
I have no idea how not-snowy the place you're coming from is, so this might be dumb advice, but: take a nice scarf! Scarves are amazing.
And: dust yourself off as soon as you get in the building. If it snows on you, try to get as much snow off as possible after you get somewhere warm, because the snow will melt and make you wet, which is exceedingly unpleasant.
I think unless they're getting several inches of snow that day you can wear heels without switching to snow boots. Places that get a lot of snow are good at clearing off sidewalks quickly, so unless you hike across fields, you shouldn't be anywhere with heavy drifts of snow. And if there IS a snowstorm that day, I doubt anyone will think less of you for any wardrobe malfunctions due to the weather.
I have no idea how not-snowy the place you're coming from is, so this might be dumb advice, but: take a nice scarf! Scarves are amazing.
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