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G Manifesto Vindicated
10-04-2011, 12:19 AM
"It is nice to see people coming around on this one after years, and I mean years of hate from the Internet masses."
Haters gonna hate, but even this surprises me. Modern people won't know classy fashion if it bumped into them on the train.
"I am not big on "sports coat and jeans look" though."
Nothing like sport coat and jeans to says high-class hipster (is that an oxymoron?)...or too short of an attention span to get a jacket and a pair of slacks in the same season.
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G Manifesto Vindicated
10-04-2011, 12:00 PM
Thanks G. I am going to try slacks and sports coat as that makes me feel comfortable at this stage and I can move my swagger to it without disrupting my flow.
The photo of JFK inspired me. Now that I think back to my childhood this is what I wanted to look like on my journey. Also ordering monogrammed fitted white shirts.
The Lizard Whisperer.......
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G Manifesto Vindicated
10-07-2011, 05:33 PM
I have received a lot of PM's about this.
My advice is, do not go Custom on your first suit.
It is going to take a long while for you to find out what you like (and maybe more importantly, what you don't like) in Suits.
And although men's style is timeless, style does change a little over time.
It took me years to figure out what I think is the Perfect Suit.
And who knows, in a year or two, I might have a different opinion.
The more I think about it, my style of "Game Kung-Fu" (ie with a heavy Custom Suit slanted edge) takes time to master. It is not going to be a "quick fix". I have been doing this for years. (That also being said, I think "Suit Game" is the easiest way to jump your Game up two levels instantly).
But once you do, The World and Everything in it are within your grasp.
So don't drop a ton of CASH on a Custom, your first time out.
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G Manifesto Vindicated
10-07-2011, 05:54 PM
^^^^ this is good advice. dabble a little bit w/the cheaper off the rack stuff you can find at places like nordstrom rack. get a good tailor and you will be okay. when you start to know what you like and what you dont (and this takes years, not weeks) and you know what you want will last for 10 years (at least) then start to splurge. doing it this way will make you appreciate it more as well. but what i would recommend for the youngsters is custom shirts. you can get a custom shirt made for less then a lot of brand name off the rack shirts that you need to spend even more money on to get altered.
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G Manifesto Vindicated
10-08-2011, 02:30 AM
My beginner advice? Get a H&M suit. Dirt cheap and still good quality to last you a couple of seasons. Wear it out and see how it follows you, observe the lines when you move your arms and stretch. These are the thing you'll be discussing with your tailor when you are ready for a "custom" (still can't get used to that term). 80% of the talent you meet won't know the difference visually anyhow and if you're questioned about the brand just say "Oh I just came here directly from work, my Gieves & Hawkes/Brioni is at the dry cleaner."
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G Manifesto Vindicated
10-08-2011, 06:28 PM
First: Nick Wooster is a fucking beast, even if he's 200% gay. He's 100% beast.
Anyway, I think custom for a first suit is fine, depending on the definition of "custom".
There's made-to-measure and then full-blown bespoke. If you don't know anything about suits, bespoke is a waste of time and thousands of dollars. MTM is for anyone.
The primary difference between the two is that bespoke involves the creation of an entirely new suit pattern from scratch, and involves multiple fittings in person with the tailor. MTM just modifies an existing pattern via your measurements, sizing it up or down in different dimensions, and this is what the Hong Kong/traveling tailor suits are.
You can get servicable MTM done at reasonable prices by "Thick as Thieves" and "Indochino". TaT is better by a hair, IMO.
Anyway, my preferences are as follows:
Jackets: Single breasted 3-roll-2, NO pick stitching, patch pockets, NO ticket pocket, side vents, functional sleeve buttons, suppressed waist, fairly short length.
Trousers: No cuff, flat front, frogmouth pockets, side tab adjustment (i.e. no belt loops)
Shirts: Cutaway collar, angled 2-button barrel cuff (leave 1 button off to make room for watch), no darts, no pockets, no label. I also sometimes do club collars, and in this case I'd round the cuffs. Get shirts from ModernTailor.
With any MTM on the internet, best to just send them a garment that fits and have them measure that. Getting measurements done off your body is probably not going to work out, and doesn't even sometimes work out in person unless it's full bespoke and they adjust the fit mid-construction (which I definitely can't afford, lol).
EDIT: I didn't read the whole thread, so if I reiterated other posts I apologize. Definitely suit up though, every day/every way.
DISCLAIMER: I don't know what I'm talking about and my posts are opinion, not advice.
Quote:Gmac Wrote:
your time > her feelings
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G Manifesto Vindicated
10-09-2011, 07:59 AM
Depending on your build, Ben Sherman makes some very affordable slim-fit suits also. Go to Nordstrom or Nordstrom Rack to try them on.
Pants fit me fine, but the jackets don't have enough room in the chest and the armholes are too low so they bunch on me, but they look great on plenty of other people. You can get them for like $250-300 sometimes. They're fused, not fully canvassed like TaT, but still not bad for OTR.
I'm not a fan of the cut on the Hilfiger slim suits, but people should still go try them on, same with Calvin.
DISCLAIMER: I don't know what I'm talking about and my posts are opinion, not advice.
Quote:Gmac Wrote:
your time > her feelings
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G Manifesto Vindicated
10-10-2011, 05:11 PM
I've always been a fan of dressing sharp and have definitely appreciated the power of suiting up, but never realized suits is one real pussy magnet that man has. I just put up a new picture in a suit on my okcupid profile and not only has my reply rate gone up but, boy, hotter women are opening me now!
G, must say you are far ahead of your times and there is real truth in your words. Mad props.
Game is a necessary evil
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G Manifesto Vindicated
10-19-2011, 12:11 AM
2 Quick Points:
1. If you're going to be stylish, make sure your shit fits well. It doesn't matter how hot the item is, it's going to look stupid on you if it's too small or too big.
2. If you're going to be stylish, run smooth game on the females. Looking fly but running asshole game sends mixed signals.