Many shirt manufacturers, namely Turnbull & Asser, offer the same shirt both in stripes and checks patterns, i.e. a regular bengal stripe shirt in white/navy, and a gingham one with the same colours and width of pattern.
Warning. A checked shirt comes across as much darker due to the additional horizontal stripes, leaving the wearer with an almost demin-shirt-like result.
Dont!
I never got the checked shirt/gingham shirt thing.
Perhaps the madras shirt craze of the sixties polluted my mind.
But here's a thought experiment for the Beasty Boy: Navy suit, Madras shirt, and Hermes tie!
Not sure about madras - every few years I used to buy a madras piece (shirt or shorts), usually from Polo Ralph Lauren. I never got the hang of it.
At the moment, I am a Bengal man.
An extra warning for all checks in NAVY blue/white!!1
Agree. But that is not a PoW, right? And too dark a shade of blue, for my taste.
I think its called Glenfield?
In a more sky/baby blue it might be nice.
What have you just discovered?
come again
Its about stripes being more elegant than checks and also more considerate towards the underlying shirt base.
Yes I am talking about business, although in some circles it is fashionable (shudder) to wear boyish Ginghams or Tattersal shirts with ties, often people from the professional classes (lawyers and the like) who don't own a place in the countryside but wish they would. You know the type.
And more precisely, I am talking about double cuff poplin shirts. I don't care much about herringbones or twills.