Your Hero has just taken delivery of a Blazer!!! brass buttons and all...(I'll post pics when I find the bloody camera)
Anyway, how do we dress the Blazer for different occasions....
Aye aye, Captain.
Being a life long yachtie, I could not bring myself to wear a proper blazer. Too much emotional baggage.
The one blazer I have has gray horn buttons, so I can wear it basically any occasion imaginable, short of black tie. The gold buttons will bring the range down a bit. Still can go from khakis to grey wool trou I believe. I think jeans are out with the brass though.
Golf club?
Cricket club?
Bowls club?
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/men/fashion-and-style/11561606/Why-the-Jerry-from-the-Good-Life-look-is-back-in-fashion.html
Surbiton golf club is a bit too close to the gypsy camp. Nice half way house though. I would forget about a cravat if I were you.
Last edited by Kingston1an (2016-02-07 13:30:58)
^
No, Lap dancing club.
...I suspect there was plenty of 'wood' but it wasn't of the bowling variety.
A hopsack blazer and safari jacket was access to all areas back in Alan Whicker's day.
With a cravat, you look like Stan and Pam Herbert
A good dark blazer gives plenty of opportunity for peacock shirts and ties.
If I looked like Craig Brown I would remain silent about appearance, clothing etc., etc.
A blazer's a basic item in my world, suitable for any activity that doesn't involve a job or grief. (In other words, don't wear a blazer to a job interview or a funeral.)
Blazer with chinos is the casual side of it. Boring but safe. Blazer with jeans is the Warhol effect. Oh how edgy. Gaah.
Blazer with linen pants, or gabardine, or flannels can be quite elegant.
Blazer with grey trousers is frequently maligned as the security guard look. All I can say is if you do it right nobody's going to mistake you for security.
Blazer over polo shirt with rumpled chinos and trashed boat shoes is okay if you have a thousand dollar bill stapled to your forehead. Otherwise it's an unfortunate look.
That is all.
Blazer/rumpled boating outfit can be cool.
And the Retired Colonel look (DB Blazer, matt gold buttons with nautical/club logo, not-too-dark flannels, club tie) can be nice when properly done, by over 60-year-olds.
The blazer is more than that, but you need a certain sangfroid & charisma to do it, otherwise you're just another wannabe down at the sport's club.
It looks very ceremonial - out of place in a work environment
I don't see it as ceremonial at all, an indicator of travel and sport too.
Chipper looks fine to me and his blog is interesting as well.