Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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Ten rules for being well-dressed: to follow, or to flout?
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View Post(I'm not "channeling" OXOboy honest ) and how things have improved as a result IMV
About time we stopped daft schools telling their pupils that they have to dress like 1950's office workers, try going to a university on a day when they are doing interviews lots of awkward teenagers in suits "SUITS ON 18 year olds ???? " being interviewed by staff in comfortable clothes.
Around that time there was a TV programme about cross-dressing, which I watched with initial curiosity and then growing sympathy, when advocates and practitioners complained To A Man about the limited range of sartorial style available to us, hoodies, trainers and t-shirts in limited colour ranges having been "fashionable" for at least 20 years. It struck me that one of the attractions of the West to those living under Communism, not having to conform by donning uniforms, had been done away with. Personally, one of the things I miss from men's wear is the range of casual smart exemplified by sports jackets in different pattered materials and colours which was still available in all mainstream chain stores in the 1980s. Some of this clobber was still available in Brixton market when I first moved here 9 years ago, when well, casually dressed middle-aged West Indian men were still to be seen around the place. If men are to continue to be forced to look drab, I'll just wear my one-piece boiler suit.
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I'll just wear my one-piece boiler suit.According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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amateur51
Originally posted by french frank View PostThat reminds me of an occurrence that I'd quite forgotten. I had come by a small Persian miniature and was going to the local art gallery where there was a curator who specialised in Middle Eastern art. I hoped he would be able to tell me something about it. In the lift, the liftman surveyed the parcel I was carrying. 'Your picture?' 'Yes', I said, 'I'm going to ask Mr X his opinion of it.' The liftman nodded. 'I thought you were an artist. You're wearing corduroy.'
Wasn't there a story about a man turning up for lunch at Windsor Castle at the weekend wearing brown suede shoes? The story goes that King George V approached the miscreant and asked loudly if he was "going ratting?"
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Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View Post...alas mine no longer quite fits ... but the donkey jacket from an open cast mine store room that my Uncle gave me when i was 12 still fits as a wearable accompaniment to jeans - the de rigueur outfit at university in the 60s
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Originally posted by eighthobstruction View PostI still have USA Army parka from 70's (used now for dirty jobs [never ever washed])....and Down Ultimate jacket from 80's patched and knarled for when I want to appear back-woodsy....(not so often these days - once every 730 days)
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amateur51
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostThat and the flat pigeon-breeder cap were essential Socialist Workers party accoutrements, going with their macho "workerist" image, (their sisters too ), according to our correct Marxist position on, ahem, such crucial matters...
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... at school there was a requirement that overcoats should be navy blue.
O the joy of discovering in the army surplus store in Bath in 1969 a well-fitting navy blue greatcoat. Well fitting bicoz (I think) it was a laydeez ARP coat : but double-breasted (ahem) so ambidextrous. I was the coolest sixth-former among a load of conventionals in their trusty products from Horne's or Dunn's, Gorringes or Gamages (need to check on apostrophes here) -in a very safe provincial school...
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by vinteuil View PostO the joy of discovering in the army surplus store in Bath in 1969 a well-fitting navy blue greatcoat.
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