shredder wrote:So, anyone for velvet turnback cuffs?
Only if your name is Huggy Bear and you've got a tricked out Cadillac.
Best Regards,
Cufflink79
shredder wrote:So, anyone for velvet turnback cuffs?
Yes, fashion plates, no doubt about it. But I am not pointing to the outer layers in those plates - what I admire in them is the sense for elegance, for balance, for proportion, for colour and pattern mixing. This is the essence of dress and it can be found (or missed) in any type of fashion - 17th century, 1930's or 2009. Fashion is façon, the WAY of doing something. Doing what? DRESSING.Greger wrote:One, you are using Fashion plates from the 30s.
Then you are not in the right place. The London Lounge is (or is meant to be) about how to dress elegantly, using bespoke as means. We don't put the carriage before the horses, even if we sometimes talk more about the means than about the end - but it is always there, implied.Greger wrote:As far as how to dress with it, that is your choice. I never came to this site for the philosophy of dress, but for the art of the tailors.
That is a revolutionary statement! What do we wear in the country - gray and blue?!Greger wrote:Brown is a fashion color to be avoided, if you are going to be subtle, not stand out. So is purple weather bright or dual of any hue or name. Orange, too. Even in the thirties brown was to be avoided at all cost by the subtle minded.
They DID stand out, but not for being non-subtle; they stood out for remaining elegant and tasteful through the age of a fashion that was less so. Average width lapels survived and are still stylish today – the wide lapel fashion thankfully died out. Some fashions of the thirties died out, too, because they were unsustainable inventions (the mess jacket for civilians, for instance). I am not idealizing a past era, I am looking for the essence that transcended it and survived in today’s canons of “classic” male dress.Greger wrote:Back in past of the 60s only a few people wore average width lapels, so they stood out being non-subtle.
No, you should understand the general principles of elegant dress and take from the fashion of the day those forms of manifestation of these principles that fit you.Greger wrote:So, to a certain amount you have to move with the fashions of the decade you are living in, or you are tastless.
Why do I have to live in today’s world no matter where it takes me? What am I, a leaf in the wind? Am I uncapable of critical judgment? Do I have to follow the fashions others invent (for a living!) without trying to understand who I am and what I want? Why give myself tied and blindfolded to a fashion designer, rather than understand dress and make a choice? I will live in today’s world alright, but I won’t take for granted everything it throws at me. If I find something good (and forgotten) in the past, I’ll cherish it.Greger wrote:Nothing wrong with being retro, or bringing about some of the past. Subtle would be dead middle of the fashion period you're in. Nor can you pick a decade in the past and say, "This is all in all." You can be a false prophet, so to say, trying to con people into believing you. But you have to live in todays world no matter where it takes you and Be subtle in it. If now is what floats your boat it has nothing to do with some of the past, nor that which will come in the future. The reason why you are cherry picking is becasue you do not want to follow the rules to a T, or you are being misguided.
Greger wrote:Fashion plates then like now, so many are outlandish, or poor taste.
I am all for the preservation and perpetuation of all tailoring techniques, methods and skills. Let them all flourish and thrive. However, the same skills and methods may be applied wisely and with taste to produce outstanding results, or wasted on garments that are aesthetically unwearable – and THAT is a big shame. Sometimes it’s the tailor’s fault, sometimes it is the customer’s, sometimes both have a contribution to a failure. Good methods do not guarantee good results.Greger wrote:These rules have nothing to do with the tailors skills, and high skills will stand out just like the best skiiers will stand out even on the beginners slope. Nor should you avoid a tailors skills because some customers don't like it. Afteral, we should want all the tailors skills to be a live and used, so there is no lose to the grand trade. Some of these skills took hundreds of years to develop and it is a tradgy when they are lost to the grave. If you want to learn about tailoring go to the tailors and not there customers. The best tailors may not do some methods, in fact most of them, but they will point out subpeb tailors that do with respect and sometime awe, if they know of anybody who does that method well.
Here we agree. Bespoke tailoring is something completely different from RTW and MTM, that’s exactly what I wrote before you tried to convince me (in another thread) that bespoke had a lot in common with MTM (both using block patterns, but working with them differently). We have come full circle.Greger wrote:It is one thing to compare the best of rtw, which is m2m, because it is factory, with bespoke tailoring, but never the other way around. Bespoke tailoring is in its own world.
That picture is funny. I don't know of any tailor that has ever been advised to make what is in that picture, except the black one for entertainment. The other one would be for a movie or tv show, or maybe some back alley "tailor". One time in a little logging town this biker group of about 70 bikes went through, the movies never did it this good for wild and crazy. It is hard to actually believe people actually live that way.Costi wrote:I think I am beginning to see a point of convergence for our opinions at the horizon. With the exception of the first paragraph (thank you very much, I learn every day), I agree with almost everything that you wrote. The heritage of the tailoring and apparrel arts (I don't mean the magazine) is valuable and worth preserving and perpetuating. I learned a lot from tailors and I admire and respect them (and I keep learning). Many of them (if not most) know a lot about dressing, as you write. Most clothes styled in a manner I would not wear represent the customers' desires, rather than the tailors' taste. Because anything is possible in bespoke tailoring, there is a great temptation (on the side of the customer) to overdo things. It's like seeing the window of a good icecream shop and, overwhelmed by the possibilities, buying a bowl with 5 different flavours. Each of the icecreams may be excellent, made with great skill and talent, but when you mix them all together...
What do you think of this bespoke evening ensemble, obviously made with great tailoring skill?
Greger wrote:That picture is funny. I don't know of any tailor that has ever been advised to make what is in that picture, except the black one for entertainment. The other one would be for a movie or tv show, or maybe some back alley "tailor".
I didn't say understated, I said subtle and discreet. Is my plaid tweed coat understated? Not quite. But it is tamed by the neutral colours of the cords and sweater, so the ensemble is balanced (I hope).Greger wrote:You like being understated. I think that can be over done and missunderstood.
Understatement does not equal lack of skills, in which case it would not be an UNDERstatement (which implies there is more to state, but a choice was made not to), but a mere STATEMENT of one's lack of skills. To be able of UNDERstatement requires in fact, as you write, the skills of a master.Greger wrote:The mona lisa is not so understated that it looks like somebody without great talent did it. The brush strokes, composition, lighting, the handleing of the colors, etc, are all done by an expert, and he is really not hiding it.
I don’t know - show me a picture.Greger wrote:I don't know why you think only of eye jarring things when I speak.
The fact that the landscape behind her is inconsistently higher on one side than on the other is notorious. Yet in spite of such imperfection La Gioconda remains a masterpiece, because there is more to it than good painting skills.Greger wrote:One of the reasons why the Mona Lisa is so good is because it is almost errorless. The skill level is the same through out and it is top notch for that kind of painting.
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