Film Noir Buff wrote:
Kingstonian wrote:
formby wrote:
Cardiff...?
Thread: Has anyone got nasty with you over the way you're dressed? View Single Post
#1 January 31st, 2010, 14:10
miurasv
Troll Join Date: January 10th, 2010
Location: Cardiff, UK
Posts: 60
Has anyone got nasty with you over the way you're dressed?
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The other night I wore Crombie pink cords and Crombie Country Olive Coat with a white shirt, burgundy pocket square/handkerchief and Cheeney Crocodile (mock) boots and somebody I knew got so aggressive and nasty with me about the way I was dressed that the barman at the club I was in noticed and he got the bouncers to throw the guy out. Has anything similar happened to you?
http://www.crombie.co.uk/p/Category_Men_Coats/4629.htm
http://www.crombie.co.uk/p/Category_...ts/60059TR.htm
miurasv
View Public Profile
Find all posts by miurasvRemember the guy who claimed that wearing a pocket square got him fired from a big law firm?
It could be that the wearer's demeanor or attitude could affect how much they get picked on more than what they're wearing. When I wear bold stuff, people like it, even some of the roughest customers. When you wear clothes, you have to have a certain sense of humor about fancy items. Some of these guys want to be taken too seriously and already have stiff personalities and others want to dress like they've always wanted to be an 8 year old girl, which is going to elicit some comments.
Film, believe you me it isn't. Remember a while ago me and Ace Face telling you about how wearing the wrong thing in Britain can get you into serious trouble before you have even opened your mouth. This is what makes all the iGent talk about classic British dress so f**king funny.
formby wrote:
Film Noir Buff wrote:
Kingstonian wrote:
Thread: Has anyone got nasty with you over the way you're dressed? View Single Post
#1 January 31st, 2010, 14:10
miurasv
Troll Join Date: January 10th, 2010
Location: Cardiff, UK
Posts: 60
Has anyone got nasty with you over the way you're dressed?
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The other night I wore Crombie pink cords and Crombie Country Olive Coat with a white shirt, burgundy pocket square/handkerchief and Cheeney Crocodile (mock) boots and somebody I knew got so aggressive and nasty with me about the way I was dressed that the barman at the club I was in noticed and he got the bouncers to throw the guy out. Has anything similar happened to you?
http://www.crombie.co.uk/p/Category_Men_Coats/4629.htm
http://www.crombie.co.uk/p/Category_...ts/60059TR.htm
miurasv
View Public Profile
Find all posts by miurasvRemember the guy who claimed that wearing a pocket square got him fired from a big law firm?
It could be that the wearer's demeanor or attitude could affect how much they get picked on more than what they're wearing. When I wear bold stuff, people like it, even some of the roughest customers. When you wear clothes, you have to have a certain sense of humor about fancy items. Some of these guys want to be taken too seriously and already have stiff personalities and others want to dress like they've always wanted to be an 8 year old girl, which is going to elicit some comments.Film, believe you me it isn't. Remember a while ago me and Ace Face telling you about how wearing the wrong thing in Britain can get you into serious trouble before you have even opened your mouth. This is what makes all the iGent talk about classic British dress so f**king funny.
Personally, it wouldn't bother me because I have a quick temper myself, but it's different in the USA where you can get picked on for being small or looking effeminate or too pretty. But nice clothes will usually only get you robbed. Most of the low life here love clothes and respect a snappy dresser. Plus a few of them might think you're "connected".
Another notable thing, we striate our watering holes more than you do. I go to places where people who want to fight cant afford to go. In England, it seems like the pubs are some sort of common ground by neighborhood. You can also get arrested here much more easily for things I think they allow in the UK.
Film Noir Buff wrote:
formby wrote:
Film Noir Buff wrote:
Remember the guy who claimed that wearing a pocket square got him fired from a big law firm?
It could be that the wearer's demeanor or attitude could affect how much they get picked on more than what they're wearing. When I wear bold stuff, people like it, even some of the roughest customers. When you wear clothes, you have to have a certain sense of humor about fancy items. Some of these guys want to be taken too seriously and already have stiff personalities and others want to dress like they've always wanted to be an 8 year old girl, which is going to elicit some comments.Film, believe you me it isn't. Remember a while ago me and Ace Face telling you about how wearing the wrong thing in Britain can get you into serious trouble before you have even opened your mouth. This is what makes all the iGent talk about classic British dress so f**king funny.
Personally, it wouldn't bother me because I have a quick temper myself, but it's different in the USA where you can get picked on for being small or looking effeminate or too pretty. But nice clothes will usually only get you robbed. Most of the low life here love clothes and respect a snappy dresser. Plus a few of them might think you're "connected".
Another notable thing, we striate our watering holes more than you do. I go to places where people who want to fight cant afford to go. In England, it seems like the pubs are some sort of common ground by neighborhood. You can also get arrested here much more easily for things I think they allow in the UK.
I think in general you are correct. In England though, especially the cities, the best places are far more select in the clientèle they let in, certainly in London there are places were if you don't look the right sort, you'll be turned away. Quite tight too, why should you put up with abuse for caring to dress well.
The problem places tend to be the old ex-industrial cities and towns where you can suffer quite a bit of verbal abuse and goading. The British mentality is different to the American one, there is sadly a 'not how can I be successful' attitude' but more of a 'how can I stop you being successful' attitude. There are people in Britain who think 'if they can't have it' then they 'nobody else should have it' That's what you get for rewarding people for sitting on their arses rather than working.
The_Shooman wrote:
Looks like a suit my grand-ma used to wear. Dowdy is the word. l hope he lives in the country, l couldn't imagine men wearing that in the city.
Stylish farmer suit, but oh that clashing lining. Colour blind perhaps?
Beats walking around the bush bare foot, all strung out on Wigemore, though don't it?
formby wrote:
Film Noir Buff wrote:
formby wrote:
Film, believe you me it isn't. Remember a while ago me and Ace Face telling you about how wearing the wrong thing in Britain can get you into serious trouble before you have even opened your mouth. This is what makes all the iGent talk about classic British dress so f**king funny.
Personally, it wouldn't bother me because I have a quick temper myself, but it's different in the USA where you can get picked on for being small or looking effeminate or too pretty. But nice clothes will usually only get you robbed. Most of the low life here love clothes and respect a snappy dresser. Plus a few of them might think you're "connected".
Another notable thing, we striate our watering holes more than you do. I go to places where people who want to fight cant afford to go. In England, it seems like the pubs are some sort of common ground by neighborhood. You can also get arrested here much more easily for things I think they allow in the UK.I think in general you are correct. In England though, especially the cities, the best places are far more select in the clientèle they let in, certainly in London there are places were if you don't look the right sort, you'll be turned away. Quite tight too, why should you put up with abuse for caring to dress well.
The problem places tend to be the old ex-industrial cities and towns where you can suffer quite a bit of verbal abuse and goading. The British mentality is different to the American one, there is sadly a 'not how can I be successful' attitude' but more of a 'how can I stop you being successful' attitude. There are people in Britain who think 'if they can't have it' then they 'nobody else should have it' That's what you get for rewarding people for sitting on their arses rather than working.
Well those select places are the only places I want to go to anyway. Besides, Im not considered an easy target here and find it hard to imagine I'd be the first choice to be picked on over there. Fine clothes are as much loved by gangsters as wusses but wusses seem to post more on clothing forums.
Dont discount guns. Guns are a big factor in the USA. We have a lot of hand gun violence because they're easy to get. People are more careful here because you might be packing.
Plus, if someone is too stupid to know not to wear some flamboyant tweed to a local pub where people are itching to smack people around for any sign of self improvement, then maybe it's what keeps the iGent herd strong.
Film Noir Buff wrote:
formby wrote:
Film Noir Buff wrote:
Personally, it wouldn't bother me because I have a quick temper myself, but it's different in the USA where you can get picked on for being small or looking effeminate or too pretty. But nice clothes will usually only get you robbed. Most of the low life here love clothes and respect a snappy dresser. Plus a few of them might think you're "connected".
Another notable thing, we striate our watering holes more than you do. I go to places where people who want to fight cant afford to go. In England, it seems like the pubs are some sort of common ground by neighborhood. You can also get arrested here much more easily for things I think they allow in the UK.I think in general you are correct. In England though, especially the cities, the best places are far more select in the clientèle they let in, certainly in London there are places were if you don't look the right sort, you'll be turned away. Quite tight too, why should you put up with abuse for caring to dress well.
The problem places tend to be the old ex-industrial cities and towns where you can suffer quite a bit of verbal abuse and goading. The British mentality is different to the American one, there is sadly a 'not how can I be successful' attitude' but more of a 'how can I stop you being successful' attitude. There are people in Britain who think 'if they can't have it' then they 'nobody else should have it' That's what you get for rewarding people for sitting on their arses rather than working.Well those select places are the only places I want to go to anyway. Besides, Im not considered an easy target here and find it hard to imagine I'd be the first choice to be picked on over there. Fine clothes are as much loved by gangsters as wusses but wusses seem to post more on clothing forums.
There's a certain aspirational attitude to Americans which is very refreshing, you're a relatively new country which on the whole doesn't seem to be burdened with class distinctions as Britain does. I'm sure that class distinctions exist in the U.S. but they manifest themselves differently I think and I don't think they are as destructive as they are in Britain.
Also, in my experience Americans are far more polite and better behaved than the British. The British, and I've said this before are a rabble.
Film Noir Buff wrote:
Plus, if someone is too stupid to know not to wear some flamboyant tweed to a local pub where people are itching to smack people around for any sign of self improvement, then maybe it's what keeps the iGent herd strong.
You're too quick for me...![]()
The concept of self improvement is foreign to a lot of Brits, especially the ones we are talking about.
Last edited by formby (2010-02-14 14:10:27)
Film Noir Buff wrote:
Dont discount guns. Guns are a big factor in the USA. We have a lot of hand gun violence because they're easy to get. People are more careful here because you might be packing.
True. Hopefully an igent vigilante hero will emerge in due course. He rides the subway wearing 16 ounce suits, and Edward Green shoes with freshly applied edge dressing. When approached by punks he produces a handgun and three hoodlums bite the dust - a Bernard Goetz for the clothing forum era.
http://www.styleforum.net/showpost.php? … count=1415
Is something wrong with these shirt collars?
formby wrote:
The British mentality is different to the American one, there is sadly a 'not how can I be successful' attitude' but more of a 'how can I stop you being successful' attitude. There are people in Britain who think 'if they can't have it' then they 'nobody else should have it' That's what you get for rewarding people for sitting on their arses rather than working.
I suspect that's true across Europe. It's definitely the case here in France.
Making progress in the States, too.
Looks like Film stopped Whnay in his tracks from posting himself in his Rubisnacci duds. Hilarious!
Film Noir Buff wrote:
This is the sort of disservice they provide for poor, unassuming members. If this outfit is going to get rave, encouraging reviews, then how is a person ever to learn how not to wear things this unfortunate.
http://www.styleforum.net/showpost.php? … count=3780
http://i863.photobucket.com/albums/ab19 … 213415.jpg
http://i863.photobucket.com/albums/ab19 … 213417.jpg
Rave reviews, misleading the unfortunate.
http://www.styleforum.net/showpost.php? … count=3797
http://www.styleforum.net/showpost.php? … count=3807
Oh good lord, that's a fucking disaster.
Film Noir Buff wrote:
http://vox.smugmug.com/Fashion/soigne/1 … 6ht-X2.jpg
Something frightens me about this jacket pattern, it's like the skin or shell of an armadillo. The patch pockets are a rotten idea and the cloth looks like it can't bend. The TV fold white hanky only exacerbates the stiffness of the wearer, who resemble a plastic mannequin. I half expect someone to swing him horizontally under their arm and place him in another part of the park.
I think that's a wonderful cloth, but as you say the pockets are wrong. This guy has some physical problems which does not help.
http://www.styleforum.net/showpost.php? … count=3857
The enormous patch pockets are awful. The shoulders are a complete mess and that vest enhances the thrift store mood of the ensemble.
Is it bespoke? I'm trying to understand how he could have a bespoke suit made of "mystery tweed".
JDelage wrote:
Is it bespoke? I'm trying to understand how he could have a bespoke suit made of "mystery tweed".
The mystery is why he got it made up at all.
Is this a green suit?
calvinloke;2960026 wrote:
Boring suit again, but not so boring tie. Actually a newly bought tie.
^ That shit only works for Prince Michael of Kent, which those photos prove.
Big Tony wrote:
^ That shit only works for Prince Michael of Kent, which those photos prove.
Another case of our "classless" society slavering after royalty?
The suit is quite sloppy in its fit. It is unbelievable that he's using a green pocket square. As color the silver tie on the white shirt with the pea green suit isnt a bad color combination for a floral arrangement but for a man's outfit it's something of an oddity. No one I know would wear such an ensemble and I feel relieved that this is the case.
Film Noir Buff wrote:
Big Tony wrote:
^ That shit only works for Prince Michael of Kent, which those photos prove.
Another case of our "classless" society slavering after royalty?
The suit is quite sloppy in its fit. It is unbelievable that he's using a green pocket square. As color the silver tie on the white shirt with the pea green suit isnt a bad color combination for a floral arrangement but for a man's outfit it's something of an oddity. No one I know would wear such an ensemble and I feel relieved that this is the case.
That I should imagine is RTW.
This place is just green with envy.
formby wrote:
Film Noir Buff wrote:
Big Tony wrote:
^ That shit only works for Prince Michael of Kent, which those photos prove.
Another case of our "classless" society slavering after royalty?
The suit is quite sloppy in its fit. It is unbelievable that he's using a green pocket square. As color the silver tie on the white shirt with the pea green suit isnt a bad color combination for a floral arrangement but for a man's outfit it's something of an oddity. No one I know would wear such an ensemble and I feel relieved that this is the case.That I should imagine is RTW.
I am talking about the MASSIVE/WIDE necktie, tied in a quadruple Windsor knot, that is curved outwards as if with a wire stiffener.
Buffy is talking about the accessories and color/pattern details, as always.
Big Tony wrote:
I am talking about the MASSIVE/WIDE necktie, tied in a quadruple Windsor knot, that is curved outwards as if with a wire stiffener.
Buffy is talking about the accessories and color/pattern details, as always.
It looks OK to me. It could be the camera lens exaggerating the tie. The suit fit and colour combinations look pretty good too.
Kingstonian wrote:
Big Tony wrote:
I am talking about the MASSIVE/WIDE necktie, tied in a quadruple Windsor knot, that is curved outwards as if with a wire stiffener.
Buffy is talking about the accessories and color/pattern details, as always.It looks OK to me. It could be the camera lens exaggerating the tie. The suit fit and colour combinations look pretty good too.
I agree. It's definitely not a Windsor knot. I suspect it's a 4-in-hand, maybe looped twice. I'm not enthralled by the suit, but that tie is pretty sweet. Might be straight from the Drakes' sales:
http://shoponline.drakes-london.com/zoo … 20end.aspx
Film Noir Buff wrote:
http://vox.smugmug.com/Fashion/soigne/1 … 6ht-X2.jpg
Something frightens me about this jacket pattern, it's like the skin or shell of an armadillo. The patch pockets are a rotten idea and the cloth looks like it can't bend. The TV fold white hanky only exacerbates the stiffness of the wearer, who resemble a plastic mannequin. I half expect someone to swing him horizontally under their arm and place him in another part of the park.
I bet most of his own pictures are photoshopped with fit corrections and all, that would explain the apparent artificiality. He's shown to be quite able in Photoshop himself especially with homoerotic themes.
I think the problem with this cloth is not of concept but of execution. I've seen modern interpretations of the gun club that are actually quite nice.
Oh, and by the way, with a 16 oz cloth like this one, tailors can get away with unskillfulness that would be very clearly revealed with an 8 oz cloth.