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Is this really the look one should aspire to?
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Certainly matching shoulder construction to body type is a very sound idea, but also congruence with tradition for certain garment types has a role to play too.
Not at all. Thanks for your thoughts. I do wear it with odd pants for the most part.jefferyd wrote: We shouldn't take the shoulder out of the context of the greater picture- there is nothing particularly wrong with that shoulder on its own, but I don't think it does this particular wearer any favors because of his build and/or posture. No, let me take that back, now that I look at it again. It looks like it is sitting on his shoulder points, rather than being pitched forward and it is a miserably small sleeve at the cap. Two of the great sicknesses of RTW (before anyone who doesn't know me accuses me of being an elitist snob, know that I work in the RTW business) . Working that shoulder forward and a more generous sleeve cap would make a huge difference in the appearance and comfort of that suit. As it is, I wouldn't like it on anybody.
Your jacket, on the other hand, if paired with an odd trouser, would look fine, IMO. I don't love it as a suit. (Am I being crotchety this morning?)...
If made by a good tailor it certainly won't look that way, nor move that way.Simon A wrote:I am not sure about that, if wearing quarterback-style shoulder pads I would be afraid of knocking the porcelain off the hall stand every time I walk inside.
Is this really the look one should aspire to?
Certainly matching shoulder construction to body type is a very sound idea, but also congruence with tradition for certain garment types has a role to play too.
May I reply using your own words, Gregger?Greger wrote:Watching TV the other night and somebody was sitting behind a desk with a sloppy looking drape coat and it didn't give a good impression. If I went to a bank and saw that I would probably walk out and go to a different bank to find more responsible people behind the desks.
And about being "responsible" - do you think a soft shoulder is a mark of someone irresponsible? I pray to God that I never have to dress to accommodate other people's prejudices...Greger wrote:I'm always amazed at how some people think. They see one tailor do a lousy job and then they think that all tailors who do that style do a lousy job.
Massacre? I am not sure your own words are sharp enough for a butcher's jobGreger wrote:Wow! You massacre me with my own words!
Hardly any drape on the first coat, it is a structured coat that, according to a friend who once put it on a hanger for me, sits on a hanger like an Empress on her throne. It is clean, lean and very nicely made in that style.Greger wrote:That window paine coat where is the drape? As a small boy I had been looking at coats and decided I liked one that had drape just in front and behind the scye. Mom said something like, "Oh no. It is to close to the scye." Better drape is out towards the chest area more, so she said. Next to the scye it is to easy, or less skill to make.
Could there be an explanation for why it was cut that way? I am trying to imagine whether it would look right if rolled to the bottom rather than middle button.jefferyd wrote:Never mind the shoulder, the facings on that Rubinacci suit make me want to cry. And not in a good way.
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