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#1 2009-05-04 16:02:38

Bishop of Briggs
Member
Posts: 3948

Tuxedo article in WSJ - read and weep

http://online.wsj.com/article_email/SB124122358890679231-lMyQjAxMDI5NDAxNDIwMjQzWj.html

"the looks include Moschino's zebra-striped cotton-and-silk tuxedo jacket embroidered with pearl buttons, a slate-pink 100% silk tuxedo by New York-based designer duo Shipley & Halmos and, hitting stores later this summer, Salvatore Ferragamo's blue velvet tuxedo jacket with a silver mink shawl lapel.

"Saks Fifth Avenue highlighted nontraditional tuxedo looks for its spring print ad campaign, including a denim tuxedo by Dolce & Gabbana ($2,530 for the jacket; $1,170 for the trousers).

"Fernando Rodriguez, brand director for hickey, a line of trendy, eclectic clothing with a marijuana leaf as its logo, hopes to convince men that its $1,395 Donegal tweed tuxedo, and more creative styles in general, are good investments. Unlike a traditional black tuxedo, creative ones can be worn "for more than just a wedding or formal event," Mr. Rodriguez says. He suggests pairing it with sandals and a white shirt for a hotel opening, for example. Wearers could "get more for their dollar," he says, than with a more traditional tux that they might wear only on a special occasion.

Even worse - "Notched lapels, like the ones on President Barack Obama's tuxedo jacket at the Inaugural balls, aren't appropriate, according to "The Encyclopedia of Men's Clothes," a CD-ROM book by men's style authority Andy Gilchrist. Mr. Gilchrist and other traditionalists insist on black bow ties with tuxedos.

"Thom Browne, the influential menswear designer known for his shrunken suit jackets and ankle-baring pants, contends "seersucker is a perfect fabric for a guy to have an excuse to actually buy a tuxedo." He created a $1,200 seersucker tuxedo jacket and matching $375 seersucker Bermuda shorts for Brooks Brothers' Black Fleece line."

Where's that machine gun?!


Contrary to lies of FNB and Woofboxer, I (and most of the other "Buff Bastards") have been banned from posting on this forum. There are only a few posters left so don't waste your time on here. This forum is dead and nobody cares.

 

#2 2009-05-04 16:44:09

formby
Member
From: Wiseacre
Posts: 8359

Re: Tuxedo article in WSJ - read and weep


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

Souvent me Souvient

 

#3 2009-05-04 16:57:33

Bishop of Briggs
Member
Posts: 3948

Re: Tuxedo article in WSJ - read and weep

Oh dear indeed!


Contrary to lies of FNB and Woofboxer, I (and most of the other "Buff Bastards") have been banned from posting on this forum. There are only a few posters left so don't waste your time on here. This forum is dead and nobody cares.

 

#4 2009-05-04 17:17:08

Chris Kavanaugh
Member
From: Westlake Village California
Posts: 271

Re: Tuxedo article in WSJ - read and weep

Did the eyetalians quietly bring back castrati as fashion models?


" Fallacies do not cease to be fallacies because they become fashion. "

G.K. Chesterton

 

#5 2009-05-04 18:29:39

Film Noir Buff
Dandy Nightmare
From: Devil's Island
Posts: 9345

Re: Tuxedo article in WSJ - read and weep

Man, retail is so lost.

Although the good news is I will look trendy in my gold silk and wool crepe double breasted dinner jacket. Maybe Ill get that Hugh Jackman, Wolverine doo?

A donegal tweed dinner jacket is just about as crap as a cashmere one. Logsdail provides some sound advice.

 

#6 2009-05-04 18:58:45

ray
Member
Posts: 43

Re: Tuxedo article in WSJ - read and weep

Good Christ, denim tuxedos? Is that what passes for clever now?

 

#7 2009-05-06 09:54:36

Film Noir Buff
Dandy Nightmare
From: Devil's Island
Posts: 9345

Re: Tuxedo article in WSJ - read and weep

 

#8 2009-05-06 10:26:49

Tony Ventresca
Member
Posts: 5132

Re: Tuxedo article in WSJ - read and weep

At what point does a tuxedo become a two-piece suit with a shawl collar?

 

#9 2009-05-06 10:47:21

Film Noir Buff
Dandy Nightmare
From: Devil's Island
Posts: 9345

Re: Tuxedo article in WSJ - read and weep

 

#10 2009-05-06 10:53:25

Kingstonian
Member
From: sea to shining sea
Posts: 3205

Re: Tuxedo article in WSJ - read and weep

The man on the left is like one of the characters from Butthead and Beavis.

 

#11 2009-05-07 04:18:06

Horace
Member
Posts: 6433

Re: Tuxedo article in WSJ - read and weep

I like the read dinner jacket.  For fun.  I;d go black shoos.  Maybe even grosgrain-bowed pumps to throw the whole thing into sharper relief.  White shirt rather than robins egg blue, though that works too. 

I'd say "for entertaining at home," but who the hell does that?  Not many.  And certainly not the phoneys in forum-land.


""This is probably the last Deb season...because of the stock market, the economy, Everything..." - W. Stillman.

 

#12 2009-05-07 05:05:40

NJS
Member
Posts: 2358

Re: Tuxedo article in WSJ - read and weep

Maybe this is the only way to keep evening dress alive - if so it should be put out of its misery and shot - along  with these designers.

 

#13 2011-05-16 07:19:14

Big Tony
Member
Posts: 5478

Re: Tuxedo article in WSJ - read and weep


"What sort of post-apocalyptic deathscape is this?"
"I don't want to look like a cock hungry sailor after all !!!"
"When it comes to infidelity, broken families, and reckless fatherhood, the underclass are amateurs."

 

#14 2011-05-16 07:25:18

NJS
Member
Posts: 2358

Re: Tuxedo article in WSJ - read and weep

Hey, Tony, shame that you haven't told me about this picture before now!

 

#15 2011-05-16 07:53:41

Big Tony
Member
Posts: 5478

Re: Tuxedo article in WSJ - read and weep

Isn't that kid on the right too young to even know who Johnny Ramone was?


"What sort of post-apocalyptic deathscape is this?"
"I don't want to look like a cock hungry sailor after all !!!"
"When it comes to infidelity, broken families, and reckless fatherhood, the underclass are amateurs."

 

#16 2011-05-16 13:49:30

Alexandre Orlov
Member
Posts: 116

Re: Tuxedo article in WSJ - read and weep

 

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