Fri Dec 15, 2017 9:38 am
If its good enough for you guys, its good enough for Charles, so I will confirm that his shirts, collars and ties are his weakest point. But who would expect Charles to choose a Windsor collar? He clearly has the intention to distance himself from his prodigious style predecessor and create his own legacy.
Charles has a very fine, birdlike, turkey head. He can afford to wear a tiny collar and points. I suspect the collar has a bit of tie space, the old English collars of this type did have. But when the tie is pulled into place and knotted as tightly as Charles does, we don’t see it. I think the very tight small knot, gives off vibes of nervousness, up-tight, anal retentive, arrogant and closed; according to a tailor I know who made him 22 suits, that is pretty much Charles’s personality.
On the flip side, Prince Michael gives off clear vibes of relaxed confidence. He seems a man you’d like to drink a glass with. And having met him, that is pretty much the way he is.
Honore de Balzac wrote an amazing essay called "The Theory of Gait" where he maintained that the entire history and personality of a man can be read in the way he walks and holds himself. I believe you can read a lot about a man in his choice of shirts, collars and tie. Confidence, self assurance, station, weakness, arrogance, will, arriviste neediness, middle class striving, blind conformity, lack of imagination, no sparkle of life...its all there to be read.
So, in summary, the Prince Charles is not a collar and tie I would like to see any of you copy unless that kind of collar works very well for your head and face. And remember to give is just a bit of tie space so the knot has somewhere to go and is not crushed to death by the collar points.
Cheers