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excellent, mike.
mike said:Often when I wear a black suit, people think it's midnight blue. go figure [huh]
And on the subject, I was looking to pick some folks' brains. I have 2 different very interesting black jackets; one a 1933 dated Belgium-made single breasted peak lapel with a great nipped waist cut to it and very thick nice material, and the second a double breasted jacket that is belted and pleated back. What colors and or patterns could go well with these? I don't want it to look like a kid in the 30's trying to throw together a haphazard version of morning dress or something... I have a pair of perhaps 40's-era gray tweed trousers that have a black weave that -somewhat- resembles a stripe, and this just looks like perhaps a grotesque on evening dress. I don't want to do that, I just want to have a somewhat casual and/or classy look going [huh] thoughts?!
mike said:I agree! Is this glaringly no good?!
David V said:Black suits are for the rubes. Pair em with your best work boots and head to town for the big dance.
Senator Jack said:????!!!!!????? Wow, I guess that's like the mohawk degenerating into the faux hawk.
David V said:Ain't square advice Jack, it's good styling advice.Take it or leave it but don't miss judge it.
Black suits are for the rubes. Pair em with your best work boots and head to town for the big dance.
Senator Jack said:Here we go again. More square advice on the FL. If you don't live black, then don't buy black. That's all there is to it. Personally, I never feel right in brown shoes. They just aren't me. But I wouldn't have the audacity to advise anyone not to wear brown shoes.
Regards,
Jack
Max Flash said:It's not about audacity, Jack. We were invited to give our advice and thoughts on black suits and that's what we have done. If the poster didn't want the advice, he wouldn't have asked the question.
Senator Jack said:The black suit is an old argument here. Members wonders what killed the suit in general - grey, blue, green, whatever - failing to understand that, for very good reason, to the public it is the epitome of conformity. By advising men to conform, telling them 'grey and blue is only acceptable for work' and such nonsense, all we're doing here is taking hammer to coffin nails. As old hands, we should be encouraging newcomers to experiment with the suit, to see what's best for them, and not hand down tired rules of business that no one cares about any more anyway.
Besides that, let's face it, dressing in vintage clothes, despite its popularity here, is (and should remain) an expression of individuality. It takes great courage to walk around in a 1920s derby, doesn't it? So why should that individuality be stifled when it comes to color selection? Yes, everyone is going to make some mistakes - a man will buy a suit and come six months later hate it (and after a quarter century of collecting vintage, I still do that) - but that's how one eventually finds what works for him and what doesn't.
Regards,
Jack
Senator Jack said:My view isn't a personal attack on anyone, Max, it's simply questioning the rules that are, as you noted, passed around the internet so often they're ultimately taken as gospel. To put this in perspective, I abhor that 'black suit isn't classic' line just as much as an avid hat enthusiasts abhors hearing 'JFK killed the hat.' It just isn't true and it's kind of grating to hear it repeated ad nauseum. If the black suit isn't classic, why was it de rigueur for bankers till the 1930s? I think the problem here is the modern black suit from Hugo Boss, Armani, etc., which, I agree, is atrocious. The vintage tone on tones and mohairs, however, kick a** from here to Honk Kong, so my suggestion would be, if you want to go black, hunt one of those down.
Look, we've all seen guys rock suits and texture/color combinations that you wouldn't think anyone could pull off and they do. It's right for their physique, face, demeanor, gait. It's them and it becomes they're personal style, and I think that's what most guys here are after. But that's only going to come through experimentation and not from following ancient Brooks Brother rules.
Kind regards,
Jack
Max Flash said:Whilst this forum has a Golden Era bent, what was worn in the 1930s and 40s is not the be all and end all for everybody on this forum, and certainly not for me.