bmattock
Veteran
visiondr said:Dude,
Now that's good taste!
Hope so, I got married in it! I paid more for my suit than I have subsequently paid for good used cars. But those were different times. Family man's salary while a bachelor. Ah, memories.
visiondr said:Dude,
Now that's good taste!
bmattock said:Oh, but what about a wristwatch? Makes the man, they say. My favorites run to the classics, just like cameras. My best watch, wear it with anything, is a 1953 Omega Seamaster bumper wind in stainless steel. Dress watch, Oris City (a modern, but mechanical movement). Love my Hamilton's and Elgin's too. If I wore a waistcoat, it would have a proper watch pocket and my grandfather's 1903 Elgin pocket watch in it.
rogue_designer said:Same deal. I like mechanical watches... but I'm not married to brand. I wear a Seiko 5 series because its a trustworthy, robust, accurate movement and it didn't cost an arm and a leg.
Would I upgrade to another movement/brand had I spare money? Probably, but it would have to be truly spare. I like the function and the aesthetic, not the brand. 🙂
edit:
Getting into some of these arena's now - Pens/Watches/Hats/Bespoke suits - are hitting them when society has deemed them luxury - rather than necessary. So I have to be more careful with my choices than perhaps I would had I started 20 or 40 years ago - Certainly from a cost perspective.
NickTrop said:Aside from bad photograph, I LOVE to make my very own DIY "gentleman's chapeau" is what I call them...
... from ordinary household items.
For example, if one finds - say, an old ashtray around collecting dust, one merely has to fashion some fancy ribbons with a little apoxy to its underside, and use it to tie your ashtray/chapeau underneat the chin. If you want to get fancy, you can as some lovely bows to the ashtry/chapeau.
Old beer cans, old cameras that don't work or you don't use - most anything can be made into a gentleman's chapeau! Alls you need is a little ribbon and your imagination!
NickTrop said:You get it! bmattock! I bet you were QUITE fetching - "Spaceman Spiff" (not that I'm qualified to judge such things, and not that there's anything wrong with that... you know what I'm attempting to articulate, none too well)
Alls you need is your imagination!
I find that old sweat socks can be hung imaginatively from my ears, held on by the stems of my glasses, which makes quite a fetching sight. And if there is a box, bag, or item of apparel I have not worn on my head like a hat at one time or another, I'm not aware of it. My wife had to explain to me - legholes, dear, not eyeholes. Hey, I was Spaceman Spiff for a moment there.
They say that American men quit wearing hats as normal business attire when JFK took office - he notoriously took the Oath of Office sans chapeau.
The same was said about men wearing undershirts (as undershirts and not 't-shirts') - noticed to have dropped in popularity after Clark Gable removed his dress shirt in 1934's movie "It Happened One Night," and was revealed to be wearing nothing underneath.
Since the 1960's, beards on men outside of religious or academic circles has variously been seen as eccentric, revolutionary, or outlandish. Most polls indicate that people who wear beards are 'trusted less' by the general public. The British have a movement known as the "Beard Liberation Front." Of course.
Interestingly, the last time men commonly wore hats with suits as daily business attire, the most common hat style was the Trilby. These are hats not commonly seen today - the fedora is, but that wasn't popular in the '50s and '60s in the USA.
Moi in my favorite summer hat / a mans hat 'The Mare Panama'
from J.J. Hat Center NYC...
I have a nice Black Borsalino fedora, adds a little class to whatever you wear.
http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2106/3545155598_9a4a5a9efe.jpg