A broach, a badge a charity flag or ribbon, a poppy.
A solid tie would stand out over a pin stripe shirt.
FAMILY FEUD:CorsageBroachButtonName TagRibbon
I would think it does go together.Unless the stripes are different colors.
No. that is unstylish no
It would depend what the 'something' was.
No
Upper Left Side
A Pin
Find a button. Put the button in your hand. Push the pin down. Move the pin away from latch. Put pin in shirt. Close pin in latch. Now wear your pin
A thumbtack
go to some clothes store. they always have this service.
Many school students today incorrectly use "in" when they mean "on".The only reason to say or write "in her shirt" would be if you really mean something is "in" a shirt. For example:Sally looked nice in her newly bought shirt. (You wouldn't say Sally looked nice on her newly bought shirt.)BUT, rather than "in", most times the sentence would require "into" or "inside". "In her shirt" implies "somewhere between the skin and the shirt's material". For example of "in her shirt":The girl put her money in (or "into" or better, "inside") her shirt.Sally's kitten climbed in (or better, "into" or "inside") her shirt.Regarding something that is seen "on" a shirt, you'd use "on". For examples:I could see the care tag on her shirt through the flimsy material.Sally went to school with stains on her shirt.George had ink on his shirt.The Principal put a "Irish Pride" Pin on his shirt, but students were not allowed to wear such pins.The button on the teacher's shirt popped off and was lost somewhere on the floor.A pocket is often on the shirts men wear.Many females dislike having a breast-pocket on their shirts, so manufacturers usually do not make shirts with breast-pockets for females.