My second time shopping was first time I wasn't a completely nervous wreck. I was a little nervous, but I was also at a point where I couldn't not get what clothes I could feel a little a better in. I didn't plan very and so I was not able to find the best deals. There is no need to get a dress if you don't feel quite ready. The first outfit that I wore in public was simple a more feminine of what i usually wear (very tight fitting jeans instead of men's jeans (a girdle helped conceal my ugly bits) and a tight low cut blue top instead of a blue t-shirt or button up shirt. I also bought scarves. These can add a lot of color to your outfit and can hide an adam's apple. This was also when I purchased foundation and concealer. This is where I'm not so sure I got the best deal, but I needed help with color. I ended up getting MAC, which was probably way too expensive to start out with, but it seems to work. I somehow got the courage to ask for help at Macy's, the person was polite and sent me to the MAC counter where the sales person was also nice and helpful (they need to sell you things to make money for the corporation so they can keep their job). Neither acted like I was the first transgender person they had ever encountered. If your looking for a really good deal, the department store makeup counter is not the cheapest, but the foundation a lot of drag queens use (Dermablend) isn't that cheap either. The issue of money aside, it appears that Macy's is trans-friendly, as is MAC cosmetics. I didn't encounter LGBT phobia from stores, but got have gotten some of it from other people at mall who can't find anything better to do, mostly teenagers who do not seem all that brilliant or conservative middle-aged men who do not seem all that brilliant either. The stores will probably be nice, most people will mind their own business, some will look at you out of curiosity and get on with their day, and as George Carlin says "...lumbering through the mall, like a fleet of interstate buses..."

and many of them are the last people who should be staring or laughing. The LGBT-phobes are simply part of America's cultural and political cesspool, neither you nor anyone who is remotely civilized should even want their respect.