^ A simple conversation will suffice. Most don't understand the specific concepts and historical context in which the culture and art of clothing gestated from and currently exists in. I know it's true in my case because I was specifically speaking of people I interact with.
But your earlier response is certainly not a refutation of Hepcat. Putting a smart suit on is not equivalent to having someone recognize the quality of bespoke work. They are different concepts, and one can't use the former to refute the latter.
Last edited by Pedro de Mendez (2013-05-04 13:41:18)
not about "impressing". More about deciding what type of persona one wishes to create for a particular audience, then dressing with that result being the goal.
This is not simply a definition of "impress" (which has "positive" undertones). Sometimes being UN-impressive is the best way create the persona one believes will best help to attain a particular result in dealing with a particular audience.
I don't know where this myth of getting upgrades by being well dressed comes from. You get upgrades based on you or your companies frequent flyer points.