Prodigal_Jess
Familiar Face
- Messages
- 66
Over the last few decades I bought most of my suits in thrift stores. I favored 1940s and 1950s style cuts: longer jackets, no vent or center vent, wide or narrow lapels depending on the suit/era, higher waisted and wider legged trousers with a cuff. Think 1940s film noir to 1950s hepcat.
It's not hyperbole to say I HATE modern cuts: short jackets, fitted/skinny pants with no cuff, bilateral jacket vents, overly fitted jackets, stretchy and synthetic fabrics. Maybe this is just what I'm running across currently at thrift stores and Men's Warehouse, but can anyone recommend a place to get 40s and 50s style cuts affordably?
I was a swing dancer for years and even though I bought almost all my suits from thrift stores (except for some zoot suit reproductions from a now-defunct local shop), I was always considered very well dressed at college and at my pre-healthcare office jobs. I lost all my clothes a few years ago when the building I lived in had a bad mold outbreak. Thankfully I have very little need of a suit these days, but I would like to have one on hand when I need it. Any suggestions?
It's not hyperbole to say I HATE modern cuts: short jackets, fitted/skinny pants with no cuff, bilateral jacket vents, overly fitted jackets, stretchy and synthetic fabrics. Maybe this is just what I'm running across currently at thrift stores and Men's Warehouse, but can anyone recommend a place to get 40s and 50s style cuts affordably?
I was a swing dancer for years and even though I bought almost all my suits from thrift stores (except for some zoot suit reproductions from a now-defunct local shop), I was always considered very well dressed at college and at my pre-healthcare office jobs. I lost all my clothes a few years ago when the building I lived in had a bad mold outbreak. Thankfully I have very little need of a suit these days, but I would like to have one on hand when I need it. Any suggestions?




