I have decided that I don't like it.
It's silly & it clutters up a shirt sleeve.
Opinions, please?
When did it start?
Usually it is presented as a 'selling point' to stop the cuff opening 'gaping' - But we all know in our hearts that that's just made up & that nobody cares about 'cuff gape' if they actually have a life.
Bring back the 3Btn BD and drop the Gauntlet Button!
Miles.
Last edited by Miles Away (2006-06-26 10:47:29)
Gauntlet buttons are not life or death - I like them as I don't like to expose a patch of skin below my cuff but also appreciate the argument that they clutter the line. They are, however, required should you be meeting the Queen anytime soon.
Last edited by Panzeraxe (2006-06-26 11:49:48)
I wonder if the Brooks gauntlet is cut in such a way that the button is superfluous? That is, I've never really noticed it opening. One of my Chang shirts is without this button and the gaunlet stays closed. I mean granted, I usually don't practice spastic movements and flap my arms around, but still, I think with a longer garment, the button, it is needed? Or what.
What say you to pleats at cuffs v. shirring.
I like the shirring, though a launder rarely gets it right. But I usually do my own shirts now.
Shirring.
Pleats are nonsense. Are they French in origin? (No offense to our brothers over there, but they just seem overly refined to my eye. Shirring does the job just as well & seems more 'masculine' to me.)
A theme I ought to develope is the aesthetic of a pleasing lack of refinement. Nothing too elegant or dainty. Menswear for men!
M.
Makes sense - Thank you.
.. And then I suppose they thought that by continuing the detail on to good honest one button barrel cuffs they were in some way upgrading them.
WRONG !
Having tried it both ways I prefer a gauntlet button.
Holy necrothread fxh.
I was all gauntlet button for years, but for some reason I have been off them lately.
I prefer shirts with a gauntlet large enough that you can lay the cuff out flat to iron it easily. The larger slit in the sleeve means a gauntlet button is generally needed to stop the fabric from flapping open too much as you move your arms, thereby distracting people with your pasty under-arm skin.
On my (RTW) shirts without the button I'm always looking for it to do it up!
I can take 'em or leave 'em. They do come in very handy if you like having them.
I have never given much thought to the reason for gauntlet buttons but I assume that having a larger split in the sleeve opening enables you to roll them up more neatly if you wish to do that? Seems like a good idea and it's a pleasing little detail, but it wouldn't be a deal breaker for me.
I suppose it's very philistine and lowbrow of me, but if my shirts have gauntlet buttons, I simply ignore them--never fasten them. The bulk of my really good shirts--from Mercer and W.W. Chan do not feature gauntlet buttons, for whatever that's worth.
There ought to be a rule!
I find it doesn't matter. On the shirts I have without them the openings seem to stay pretty well closed. The bulk of my shirts are Press, Viyella, Barbour, Facconable, and Orvis and all of them have the gauntlet button, I think. I'll usually button them, but sometimes the laziness is so strong even this is too much of an effort.
The shirts I can think of that I have that don't have them are Brooks and Tyrwhitt dress shirts.
I will admit to removing the extra cuff button on sport shirts if I need to use the larger option. I cannot stand seeing the extra button on the cuff. But that's another thread.
NO gauntlet button for me pleese
It's easier to iron a sleeve without the gauntlet button.
All my shirts, both bespoke and RTW have them, I don't bother to fasten them. Does their presence bother me? No.
Clearly, this fine attorney in Washington D.C. does approve of the gauntlet button:
http://dapperdistrict.blogspot.nl/2009/12/faux-pas-gauntlet-button.html
Personally, I don't have a need for them, but then again all my shirts are so so well-constructed out of such splendid material, and so well-tailored to my body, that the gauntlet stays closed gently but resolutely around my arm, as though it were a woman unaccustomed to feeling anything so intense as the newfound love she feels for me.