Edward
Bartender
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- London, UK
I'm not sure what it is about tie wear that provokes people's judgment so readily.
I can only assume it's the association with the corporate world, like suits. I think also a lot of guys don't like them for precisely the reason I do: their lack of practical purpose. They're one of the few accessories of male clothing with serves no practical purpose other than to add to the look (there is an argument they help keep the neck warm, I suppose, but I think that's tenuous).
I would be surprised if anyone wears casual clothing in order to be rebellious. I would have thought it was more the fact that few people see the point of dressing like their grandpa - it seems so fussy and uncomfortable. But who knows? There are so many subcultures on the planet, no doubt there are many reasons for casual wear. IT folk sometimes make choices for odd reasons.
It's an interesting world alright. There do still seem to be a lot of people who go by the notion that not having to dress up like The Man wants - i.e. collar and tie - and being able to be "comfortable" (a relative term, especially in these parts, but the mainstream notion is that casual dress is more comfortable) in casual wear - is something that happens when you have 'made it'.
I do wear identical black shirts (around 2 dozen) and and about 10 pairs of identical jeans so I belong to the pretentious Job and Zuck school. Although I'm not in IT so I might stop short of being a total, self-important write off.
Ha - or you're just not into clothes. Jackets aside, natch.
The bow tie look is something I can't connect with at all - and I remember when they were fashionable in the 1970's. To my eye very few men can pull them off. In Australia bow ties seem to be donned by middle aged me who want to strongly suggest they are more interesting than other middle aged me. (Dr Who of course opened the look up to younger folk, for similar reasons and hispters, ditto) I'm used to seeing bow ties mainly on certain lawyers, architects and gynecologists.
I suspect that for me it's another subconscious Indiana Jones thing. I'm cool with that. Lawyers is an interesting association. Of course, the bow tie has a long link with architects, draftsmen, engineers, and doctors of all sorts: up out of the way, and so not inclined to get in the way, especially if working in short sleeves (functional buttoned cuffs are known in the English tailoring trade as 'surgeons' cuffs' as they were designed to allow Doctors' frock coats to be rolled up out of the way - this long before ether scrubs or Don Johnson).
Yeah, definitely not a fan of those big, clownish 70s ones.... I only wear self-tie ones as well.
I like plain grey t-shirt since they don't easily get to look faded, old, stained or dirty, however I hate elasticized collar since that part usually ages must faster than the rest of the t-shirt, so last time I bought 2 kilos of cotton t-shirt fabrics, and have it made into short sleeve t-shirt I would wear at home without elasticized collar, now I have 6 identical t-shirts to wear at home, I didn't expect the material would be enough to make that many pieces otherwise I would have asked for long sleeved turtlenecks to wear with jackets.
Mid-grey is great like that. I don't tend to wear t-shirts as outerwear now, but I have a lot of them as undershirts, and while I love a fresh white one, they definitely go grey and grubby looking faster than one that starts out mid-grey.
Reducing a wardrobe and clothing longevity would be mutually exclusive, I'd think- with laundering things regularly, the lifespan of individual items would definitely shorten.
The thing about minimalism is that you generally have to have had money and/or a surplus of items in the past. With expensive clothing, you could have one really expensive item and use it to extinction whereas five cheaper ones may all end up outlasting it if you circulated them. This might or might not apply to footwear, but wearing one pair every day is likely to give you, if nothing else, damp and rank footwear. I had a buddy who really did only seem to have two sets of clothes for work and one tie. He always looked quite well turned-out and saved a small fortune when we worked in Shanghai, but he did this with what appeared to be cheap items in the first place.
Depends on the item, really. Two pairs of shoes, worn in rotation, will last longer than three pairs of shoes worn exclusively until they need replaced. Anything will wear out faster the more frequently it is worn (relative to itself), though I've found some quality items do definitely last longer than several of a cheaper option. I'm not sure there's any universal standard on this, though. I've also known it to vary with the individual. As kids, my brother always went through two pairs of shoes to my one, with no real difference in what we got up to.