I blame Marlon Brando and the greaser crowd for making it look just so damn good...It seems that a regular t-shirt under a leather jacket is the de facto norm now...
Google “perfecto” and in 10 pages of results only one person is wearing anything but a t-shirt under their leather jacket.
Google “men’s leather jacket” and in 10 pages of results, again, only one solitary bloke is wearing anything but a t-shirt.
Getting older generally means wearing everything ironically.@Superfluous, thank you for your answer. It IS good not to have to wear suits to work everyday! Hats off to all white collar professionals successful enough to be able to choose when they wear a suit!
I wear made to measure because of the impossibility of getting an off the peg suit that fits here, and whilst they are not cheap, and I can enjoy wearing them every now and again, I never really get excited about wearing suits and enjoy it like I do flight jackets.
I guess the t-shirt thing to me is like highend leather jackets were 25 years ago; if someone told me about it back then, I'd have been incredulous, but now I get it. OTOH, it could be like selvedge denim, which I don't really get, preferring modern Levi's.
@zebedee, I wear long sleeved linen shirts in summer too. I feel like I look like a child in shorts AND a short sleeves shirt, but a casual linen shirt with long sleeves cuffs turned up twice, is a better look for me.
I have short sleeved button up linen shirts, with oversized prints of hula girls on them, and only wear them *ironically* (i.e. when I'm at a party with alcohol).
@Edward, that's interesting because I've always felt that WWII RAF and Luftwaffe pilots were real 'knights of the air', proper gentlemen, and that their leather flight jackets looked pretty good over dress shirts and ties.
On the other hand, I feel that despite being originally designed to be worn as such, all the US flight jackets look much better without ties, more casual shirts and (at their best) over a white cotton T-shirt. That's the power of 'Hollywood' right there in shaping perceptions of class and culture.
That could be an interesting topic or side conversation. Or maybe we're already having it? What does a particular piece of clothing mean to you? For instance, I already said a T-shirt is utilitarian, but I should have also added that it means comfort to me. When I want to feel comfortable (during half the months), I put on a T-shirt. I don't necessarily view them as sloppy or for slopping around town, either. Utility. Comfort. Minimalism. But I have family members who feel comfortable in dress shirts, khakis, and penny loafers. They wouldn't be comfortable in a T-shirt, even at home watching a baseball game on their couch. Their leisure clothes are a different set than mine.
And then this all changes with the situation. When I take walks at night during the summer months, I like a thin linen short-sleeved dress shirt with two pockets. Utility and comfort. Outside of that situation, I feel short-sleeved dress shirts are a hideous piece of clothing...an embarrassingly ugly piece of clothing, and I don't even get embarrassed. They're awful. That's all. But I still find a situation to prefer them.
Yes! I hate athletic gear because of this. Logos EVERYWHERE.
I can also remember that rare Toyota truck owner who would remove all the emblems and giant TOYOTA stickers from the tailgate. Logos aren't just free advertising, but they're obviously a status thing. Sold as some sort of achievement in life. I don't want any of it. Like you, I don't think about what others are thinking about my clothing (or anything, really). It's all for my satisfaction.
Not even tiny logos on the left hand side of the chest? I actually *slightly* prefer that to completely plain t-shirts, for two reasons; It looks to me like something is missing if it's absent, and secondly, it invokes the look of own-brand $2 crap in many people's eyes. (rightly or wrongly)
Conversely I would never wear a dress shirt with any visible logo.
Yep.do you guys want superman without logo as well
I'm going to steal that. In fact, I might even get it printed on a T-shirt.If you have a veranda over the tool-shed, a t-shirt is never going to look great.
@Edward, IIRC Hilts never actually wears a white T under his A-2, but yeah, his image has left an indelible air of casualness to the A-2.
When products are so lacking in distinctive features that you need to have the name written on it to know who made it, then maybe it's a product that doesn't really matter.
After all, I bought my TV, I know who made it, why the hell do I have to look at the plastic logo on the front of it? Just in case I want to rush out and buy another but my dementia is kicking in?
do you guys want superman without logo as well
Be interested to hear ..... I don't rate Fruit of the Loom anymore ... used to be OK a decade agoI bought some Lady White white t-shirts ($99 for 2). I'll update when they arrive. Doesn't seem like many in here are open to persuasion, but I'll say that I just threw out a 6 pack of Fruit of the Looms because after a bunch of washes they became less comfortable, not more. I'll pay close attention to how these feel after breaking in.
useful to figure out which remote control works with whatYep! I feel like I already bought your damn product, why have you got to force your logo down my theist in my living room? What more damn loyalty do they expect? All appliances with matching logos? WTF!