3PcSuit said:You're nitpicking. I happen to have a detachable collar shirt, but it is really no different than a modern shirt. Most of the time I've worn it, people didn't even notice it was any different from a regular shirt.
If people want to be facetious and difficult and say they don't see my point, look at women's fashion 100 years ago, and now look at mens, and look at the differening degree the two have changed.
I don't want men to walk around in dresses, mind you. But if you go back to the time of the French Revolution, men had about tehe same anout of dressing options as women did. Men's outfits were often as elaborate as women's. Now I'd say we're down to about a tenth of the options that weomen currently have. Hell, I've worked jobs where they wouldn't let me wear the bowtie I usually wear once or twice a week.
The silly pissing war and constant criticism men engender to one another about wearing anything that is even remotely *different* from a very fine-lined norm frustrates me to no small end.
I don't want the black solid suit to end, but lately, all I've been able to find at the store are black, pine-striped suits (2 pc.) and it is really starting to piss me off.
Men's clothes are one aisle in the business suit store and women's clothes are the rest. Howabout a patern, a new cut, zippers instead of buttons, patterns, different numbers of buttons, different spot for pocket square, something anything original?
Well, you are quite free to wear what you like, and in various places, many things are acceptable. I live in Seattle where the utilikilt was invented. Dumb if you ask me, but guys walk around in them and pick up all the gear head girls.
However, if you want to work in the work world, especially conservative ones where the money is made, then both men and women must dress conservatively. If you want to dress up and dress creatively, go int othe design field where it is encouraged.
Thing is, for me, wearing vintage suits etc was actually a statement of non comformity. Not exactly in being better dressed than everyone else, but in both searing what I liked, and wearing something different. The same with the mods I used to know, the rockabilly guys, especially the european ones that wear suits and sportcoats, or even the victorian goths. It is not about dressing better, it is jsut about dressing in a way you identify with.
Iwon't say you are not entitled to complain. If I wore vintage al lthe time now I could probably only be successful in Los Angeles in real estate. So I just wear functional decent looking clothes and let my suits lie in the closet.
But if you want more expressive clothes, there are plenty of places around. But yes, you wil be limited to what you can wear to work.
Although, I would bet that only the most conservative of jobs would have a problem with a real natty dresser who wore subtle but exquisite suits etc.