alden wrote:
How does one tread the fine line between dressing elegantly and dressing like a parody, or worse, like one's Father...?
Try to dress like your grandfather instead.
Haha! Excellent!
Actually nothing is more true than that. The present (shrinked down) state of the tailoring trade was very well explained (by Michael Alden, too) through a generational gap: at least one generation was not brought up with the notion of going to a tailor to get clothes, was not introduced to the father's tailor, did not later develop their own tastes and choose the tailor of their liking. It is the ready-made generation. Of course, this is a broad generalization, but in fact exceptions to this large scale rule do nothing but confirm it. Now the following generation, who abhores the Fathers' dress, is discovering grandpa's wardrobe in the attic and wonders
"Where have all the flowers gone", as Marlene Dietrich puts it on notes.
Because grandpa didn't have just clothes, he had STYLE. If you look at his clothes, you will be amazed to understand what good cloth is (or used to be); you will see that, even after so much time in a forgotten trunk, they still have life in them, they are like no others in cut and shape because they were made by the skilled hands of craftsmen for grandpa only and nobody else. And if you take another look at the old B&W family album you will understand why grandpa looked so well in his clothes: because he knew how to DRESS. He knew when to wear a flannel suit, what tie works well with what shirt, what shoes to wear with a tweed jacket and what hat goes with a striped worsted city suit.
As our dear Marlene's refrain goes:
"When will they ever learn,
When will they ever learn"
If one takes this as an inspiration and grasps the underlying principles, one is FREE from any formulae and cliches and can build a classically inspired wardrobe based on personal tastes, with as much modernity incorporated in it as one likes (in choice of cloth, styling, accessories, combinations etc.). Contemporary RTW is limitative, "old" bespoke is liberating.
Porteus, I dont' know how you usually dress, but are you sure the blazer & flannels made you look 20 years older, or is it the rest of your wardrobe that makes you look 20 years younger? I see no problem with a man looking 38 when he IS 38, unless he's an actor and didn't get to play Romeo yet
