Rob O wrote:Thanks, its was interesting. Do you think ‘wearing white to the face’ should be a maxim? I see so few people doing it. Maybe one needs a deep tan to carry it off.
Not with the rigidity of Lou in the story. And one doesn't need a deep tan to look good in a white shirt (remember the chestnut "every man looks good in a tux"). But there's a grain of truth there.
Alden has written here several times about the value of bringing illumination to the face—one reason why white and light blue (good also when mixed, as in various oxford weaves and stripes) are flattering to the majority of men. Different complexion shades and hair colors can be complemented by different shirt-tie-jacket combinations, but relatively few men look great in very dark shirts, especially in daytime. And if you don't have a high-contrast skin, eye, and hair color palette, wearing light to mid-tone neutrals can drain color from the face (cf. Lou's horror of gray shirts).
Alan Flusser's
Dressing the Man has a long section on evaluating complexion, eye, and hair color and selecting combinations of clothing that set off different types. He includes "good" and "bad" examples for each type. Of course the photos are lit to favor his good examples, and you may not agree with all his criteria or judgments, but the exercise provides a template for the process of evaluating what looks good on you that can be adapted. Worth checking out if you aren't familiar with it.
Almost the opposite of Lou's dictum about white, many if not most men also look good in a black (or charcoal, midnight, espresso, or other near-black) rollneck/turtleneck
at night. Especially one with some texture and a textured jacket. The light level in the evening is lower, and the face benefits from its comparative brightness compared to the surrounding clothes. Dinner clothes or formal clothes give the face an evening halo of white but (apart from summer dinner jackets) similarly deflect attention from the body.
Anyway, regardless of your opinion of its subject's particular "secrets," it's a fine piece of writing. Thanks, UC.