I was curious about how you recommend to handle textures in your dress: i.e. do you match or contrast?
As an example, when wearing a tweed coat, do you wear a smooth silk tie or a rougher wool/cashmere tie?
With a tweed coat, would you wear a silk pouchette or cotton.
With a gabardine or worsted suit, would a grenadine or knit tie be appropriate?
Are there rules guiding this matter, or is it a matter of personal style?
Matching Textures
The rule says (and I also personally prefer) to contrast.Anonymous wrote: I was curious about how you recommend to handle textures in your dress: i.e. do you match or contrast?
Smooth silk. Or knitted silk.Anonymous wrote: As an example, when wearing a tweed coat, do you wear a smooth silk tie or a rougher wool/cashmere tie?
Silk.Anonymous wrote: With a tweed coat, would you wear a silk pouchette or cotton.
Not sure about the knit tie. Here it's not just a matter of texture, but also of appropriateness. You don't wear a sober, city worsted suit with a knitted tie, regardless of textures. But you may wear a linen pocket square if you want to break the smoothness of gabardine and silk.Anonymous wrote: With a gabardine or worsted suit, would a grenadine or knit tie be appropriate?
YesAnonymous wrote: Are there rules guiding this matter, or is it a matter of personal style?
Costi
Costi makes good points- but let me point out something else that works: matching the "flatness/dullness" of textures.
For example, tweed coat, wool tie, cotton or wool square. one with the right mix of patterns and colors, I find something inherently attractive, even warm about attire that is wholly "flat" in this way.
CG
For example, tweed coat, wool tie, cotton or wool square. one with the right mix of patterns and colors, I find something inherently attractive, even warm about attire that is wholly "flat" in this way.
CG
Not sure about this: Should knit ties then only be worn in the country?Not sure about the knit tie. Here it's not just a matter of texture, but also of appropriateness. You don't wear a sober, city worsted suit with a knitted tie, regardless of textures.
Certainly not!Anonymous wrote:Not sure about this: Should knit ties then only be worn in the country?Not sure about the knit tie. Here it's not just a matter of texture, but also of appropriateness. You don't wear a sober, city worsted suit with a knitted tie, regardless of textures.
pvpatty
No, not only in the country, just not with a worsted business suit, in my view. They are fine with tweeds (often worn in town, right? ) or sporty coats and slacks. I also like to wear them with blazers (reefer jackets for correctness).
Costi
Costi
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