"Oh my! You're so beautiful tonight! You look like Marilyn Monroe, I just love that mad-men 20's thing you have going on!"
Err, yes, thanks a lot! ...Close enough.
What fun situations have you encountered?
There is always the search function.
http://www.thefedoralounge.com/showthread.php?5445-Reactions-from-people
I either get Mad Men or Bettie Page and it doesn't matter whether or not I'm wearing 30s, 40s or 50s. Not to mention that I don't have Bettie bangs.
Aubergine & Alaska White, the greatest color combination ever put on a Triumph!
When I lived in the USA, I got a few people commenting on my black fedora - asking me if I was Amish. But now in Vietnam, people either ask if I'm English or just say, "Sherlock Holmes!!". I suppose the pipe might have something to do with it. One of my bosses told me, "You're a 70 year old trapped in a 20 year old's body." I told her that I was flattered by that. It made me laugh.
But honestly, if I'm going to look the way I do, I've got to be ready for that sort of stuff and take it with grace and aplomb.
At the Twinwood festival last year, Dusty Limits, a well known, openly gay, singer/MC/comic, asked if anyone wanted a request. My wife and I had seen Dusty sing an irreverent version of Ella Fitzgerald's "Let's Do It, Let's Fall In Love." I walked up to the stage, dressed in the suit you see in the avatar, to ask him if he would sing that particular song. As I approached the stage, Dusty said I looked like an undertaker. I don't know if that was for a cheap laugh or whether he was mocking me.
A group of lads passing by muttering..."Inspector Gadget!"
In NYC late at night walking the sidewalk, a HOBO from the shadows shouts
..."Who the 'F' do you 'think' you are! Eliot F'ing Ness?!!!"
(That had me smiling into the wee small hours that night!!)
The best one was a friend, of whom a kid on the tube said to the parent "Mummy, is that lady a ghost from the Olden Days?"
You'd be surprised how much you can learn about someone from looking at their shoes. For those of us raised in the days before everyone was reduced to wearing sneakers, you could tell someone's social class, income stratum, occupation, and often how trustworthy or honest they were just by a fast glance at their feet. (If you ran into someone with a high-gloss shine on his shoes, but the heels were run over, watch out. He's all surface and no substance, and quite possibly is about to try to sell you something.)
To this day when I meet someone for the first time the first thing I do is look at their puppies.
Bettie's become a kind of go-to name for folks who don't really know what she is, but know that, you know, it's got something to do with that retro-vintage Fifties burlesque thing.... Over here, Dita's starting to become as much the name people reach for as anything.
Gorgeous! Yours?
Yeah, it'll be the pipe for sure... since the pipe's popularity as the smoking tool of choice was long ago supplanted by the cigarette, it sticks out, people notice is as different and, well... who's the most famous pipesmoker of all time (fictional or no)? If it were a cigar you could as easily have gotten Capone or Churchill. It's whatever pop-culture label comes to mind for folks. I get Poirot a lot. Don't look remotely like the guy (wish I had his wardrobe, though). Most commonly it's in the warmer months, on account of the co-respondents. Most folks can't tell the difference between those and spats (which Poirot did wear).
A kid in a tube station, round Easter 2013, said to me "Are you a spy?" Wish I'd thought to play along, but it came out of nowhere and caught me by surprise. A hilarious one was the sound, behind me, of a child who'd obviously clocked my co-respondents (at a time when a women's version was popular) - "Mummy, why is that man wearing ladyshoes?" Cue embarassed-parent-voice hissing "Shh!Shhh! No they're not! Shhh!" lol
The best one was a friend, of whom a kid on the tube said to the parent "Mummy, is that lady a ghost from the Olden Days?"
You mention twice, do tell what "co-respondents" are. I searched and just found it as a legal term, nothing to do with shoes.
As far as my own "mid dating" whilst I don't dress to a certain era, one (rainy) day I came into work wearing
1) Brown stetson fedora -"Indy" ish
2) Basic black rain/trench coat (modern london fog)
3) otherwise basic business casual... khakis, button down shirt and dress shoes.
IT guy sees me "Well if it isn't Mr. Sherlock Holmes!"
And I didn't even have a pipe!