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#1 2014-10-18 14:09:03

formby
Member
From: Wiseacre
Posts: 8359

Brown suits...

Last edited by formby (2014-10-18 14:21:47)


"Dressing, like painting, should have a residual stability, plus punctuation and surprise." - Richard Merkin

Souvent me Souvient

 

#2 2014-10-18 14:20:54

Dudley Clarke
Member
Posts: 1211

Re: Brown suits...

Dr Samuel Johnson wore brown coats a lot but, despite that, I am not that keen on brown, except as a tweed. I nearly said "or linen" but linen I like as unbleached duck; leave the coloured linen for the entrepreneurial, internet ponces to coo over everything from Havana to pooh brown and show off their creases. Brown worsted is a kind of nothing and nowhere - even nobody - suiting.


I came up to see her sometimes.

 

#3 2014-10-18 14:23:25

formby
Member
From: Wiseacre
Posts: 8359

Re: Brown suits...


"Dressing, like painting, should have a residual stability, plus punctuation and surprise." - Richard Merkin

Souvent me Souvient

 

#4 2014-10-18 15:00:14

Dudley Clarke
Member
Posts: 1211

Re: Brown suits...


I came up to see her sometimes.

 

#5 2014-10-18 16:20:01

Worried Man
Member
From: Davebrubeckistan
Posts: 15988

Re: Brown suits...

I wouldn't mind a suit of brown.  A rich, dark brown perhaps.


"We close our sto' at a reasonable hour because we figure anybody who would want one of our suits has got time to stroll over here in the daytime." - VP of George Muse Clothing, Atlanta, 1955

 

#6 2014-10-18 19:24:53

Dudley Clarke
Member
Posts: 1211

Re: Brown suits...

Oi! Oi! You've edited to include a corn and beige suiting which ain't harf bad. Pooh-brown, though, is redolent of old Crompie; especially paired up with grey flannel  trews and a blue shirt and tie -bugger me, what an abortion of taste!!


I came up to see her sometimes.

 

#7 2014-10-20 06:55:55

faizan123
New member
Posts: 1

Re: Brown suits...

THOMAS REED VREELAND—A graduate of The Hill and Yale, sixty-one-year-old Vreeland belongs to the Racquet & Tennis, Cloud, and Southampton clubs in this country, Buck's in London, and the Travellers in Paris. His tailors: E. C. Squires (around $122 for a two-piece, $133 for a three-piece suit) in London and, in New York, Pat Sylvestri, who, notwithstanding his Johnny-come-lateliness, is one of the genuinely gifted members of his profession.

 

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