NJS wrote:FiS - Yes, hang all tweeds out in a leaky barn for a few days before they are actually worn!
NJS
Frog in Suit (who does not have a leaky barn at his disposal )
NJS wrote:FiS - Yes, hang all tweeds out in a leaky barn for a few days before they are actually worn!
NJS
An alternative for you might be to place a nail in a palm tree in the garden and hang them on that for a week or so!Frog in Suit wrote:NJS wrote:FiS - Yes, hang all tweeds out in a leaky barn for a few days before they are actually worn!
NJS
Frog in Suit (who does not have a leaky barn at his disposal )
No palm trees in the garden, either. This is central Paris, you know (sooty rain most of the time, exhaust fumes and pollution all of the time...)NJS wrote:An alternative for you might be to place a nail in a palm tree in the garden and hang them on that for a week or so!Frog in Suit wrote:NJS wrote:FiS - Yes, hang all tweeds out in a leaky barn for a few days before they are actually worn!
NJS
Frog in Suit (who does not have a leaky barn at his disposal )
NJS
Time to jump ship, maybe? Go somewhere and listen to the susurrating fronds and the sound of the sea,,,Frog in Suit (who does not have a leaky barn at his disposal )
An alternative for you might be to place a nail in a palm tree in the garden and hang them on that for a week or so!
NJS
No palm trees in the garden, either. This is central Paris, you know (sooty rain most of the time, exhaust fumes and pollution all of the time...)
Frog in Suit
My father is a guards officer. Until very recently (in my living memory) he was not permitted to go up to london without a three piece suit, stiff collar, locks bowler hat and black umbrella, which was not allowed to be put up (save for a lady) when it rained (a guardsman takes a taxi)... My mother can still remember not recognising him the first time she saw him in london in the 70s, meeting outside Fortnums, when she was meeting him for a day out in London from university in Durham. He is one of the few people I know that still dresses UP to go on an aeroplane.gcg wrote:I don't know, the guards officers were once renowned for their exceptional style.marburyvmadison wrote:That is true, but is it conceivable that a secret agent, who has undergone intensive military training and have had to rough it out with KGB spies, would look quite as immaculate as the Bond of yesteryear? I think that if JB were more than a mere fictional character, he'd probably resemble Craig, than, say, the polished looks of Pierre Brosman, Roger Moore or a young Sean Connery. Not that I'm disagreeing on the problems with Tom Ford's suits on Craig, but merely pointing out that the portrayal of Bond by Craig is in all likelihood more realistic.rodes wrote:The James Bond of years back was a man of resplendent taste. Breakfast was his favorite meal, he wore a bespoke Chesterfield, and only the woman who kissed him could sense the Floris 89. Today, James travels in a track suit and sneakers. He has no time for breakfast and owns no overcoat. He shops at J Crew and sports designer cologne. The latest Bond girl has to buy his dinner jacket for him because he came to Monte Carlo without one. Does anyone really believe that he can tie his own bow tie? All this is rather sad. After all, how hard could it have been to make Daniel Craig look good?
Interesting, perhaps, but hardly surprising. The James Bond universe is a brand. Brands evolve or they gradually hollow out and die. From that perspective it is only natural that characters are revised over a period of 50 years.NJS wrote:It is interesting though that revisionism hits even here...
I suppose today one should be grateful that a suit of any kind is described in positive terms in the cultural press, but this criterion--"seductively tight"--seems the antithesis of the understated ethos that Fleming's Bond, and the long tradition of the 'English cut' he follows in, represents. The suit is supposed to hint at the powerful physique moving beneath it while maintaining a perfect decorum, not exhibit the physique like a bathing costume. But I think much contemporary taste, including female taste, has lost the ability to appreciate understatement. So the Bond suit is now the equivalent of the tight superhero costume you might actually get away with wearing in public. Meanwhile the real movie superhero costumes are no longer just tight, but include artificially enhanced molded musculature (perhaps with bionic functionality)--the modern version of the Roman contoured plate armor. Based on anecdotal evidence, I have some optimism that people (including women) tend to outgrow this phase sometime in their thirties, and the power of understatement once more becomes appealing. I hope so.Bond is wearing a silver-gray suit when he powers into “Skyfall,” the latest 007 escapade, but it isn’t cut for office work. The suit is seductively tight, for starters, and moves like a second skin when Daniel Craig in his third stint as Bond races through an atavistic opener that — with bullets buzzing and M (Judi Dench) whispering orders in his ear — puts him back on mortal, yet recognizably Bondian, ground.
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