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It may be totally anecdotal, but it has been my experience.
Hemingway Jones said:The one thing that I've notice in the 2000s, is that people seem to be less judgmental, at least here in the big eastern cities. It seems that fedoras and suits and everything else garners less quizzical looks than it used to. Hats are also much more common here in Boston than they were even five years ago, everything from hipsters wearing stingy brims and bowlers to big outback fedoras. I get far more "Nice hat" comments than Indiana Jones references now. I think the 2000s have opened people's minds a bit.
J B said:Not quite, unfortunately. At my community college, in California, I often see (mostly African-American) people wearing baggy jeans... I guess it's still popular here around L.A.
Maguire said:While i'd obviously say the 2000s, i'd say the 60s were worse simply because they had precedent- for us today it takes a conscious effort to find a hat, get a proper suit, and wear it. In the 1960s it was only the other day that it was de rigeur. They had the chance to really maintain the status quo but chose to tear it down. One can't blame the people in the 1980s or 90s or 00s for dressing like this, because its something they were born into and used to.
Early- i'd say the time when the transition occurred. The Late 60s couldn't exist without the early 60s. The 70s couldn't have happened as they did without the 60s. In a way you can even blame the late 50s ( i don't believe the world suddenly went to hell as soon as the 60s came about. Everything that burst out into the open in the 60s was simmering beneath the gilded surface of the 50s).Widebrim said:?De que' hablas, Maguire, the early or late 1960s?
I still think 60s style isn't that bad. As I said before on this thread, narrow-lapelled suits and stingy brim hats is a good look and may suit some people better than wider brimmed hats with 30s or 40s suits. Plus the decline of hats began long before the 60s, it just became noticable then. Plus I base my look on Sean Connery's Bond quite a bit so I'm naturally defensive of this decade.Maguire said:While i'd obviously say the 2000s, i'd say the 60s were worse simply because they had precedent- for us today it takes a conscious effort to find a hat, get a proper suit, and wear it. In the 1960s it was only the other day that it was de rigeur. They had the chance to really maintain the status quo but chose to tear it down. One can't blame the people in the 1980s or 90s or 00s for dressing like this, because its something they were born into and used to.
Oh i'm not talking about the suits. Stingy brims aren't so bad, i don't like them as much as the older styles but thats not what i'm talking about when i talk about style. If we are just talking about suits than its a different story altogether, i'm talking about in general. Thats why i mentioned the late 50s, not for the suits but for the gradual casual/hatless look that became more common and accepted.avedwards said:I still think 60s style isn't that bad. As I said before on this thread, narrow-lapelled suits and stingy brim hats is a good look and may suit some people better than wider brimmed hats with 30s or 40s suits. Plus the decline of hats began long before the 60s, it just became noticable then. Plus I base my look on Sean Connery's Bond quite a bit so I'm naturally defensive of this decade.
Hemingway Jones said:The one thing that I've notice in the 2000s, is that people seem to be less judgmental, at least here in the big eastern cities. It seems that fedoras and suits and everything else garners less quizzical looks than it used to. Hats are also much more common here in Boston than they were even five years ago, everything from hipsters wearing stingy brims and bowlers to big outback fedoras. I get far more "Nice hat" comments than Indiana Jones references now. I think the 2000s have opened people's minds a bit.
Marcus said:My vote.... 70's= FAIL. The 80's was the last decade to have it's own identity IMO. After that...there really isn't anything to speak of. Basically a free for all nowadays.
Marc Chevalier said:.
Yes, and the mens' suit styles from 1909 to 1912 were awful: boxy, stiff jackets with hugely wide sleeves, cardboard-like lapels, and trouser legs that ballooned at the thigh and tapered to skinny pegs at the (too short) ankle. Frankly, they were a cross between "Teddy Boy" outfits and zoot suits. Not a good mix, as it turns out.
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