Canadian
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 189
- Location
- Alberta, Canada
Ok.
I own several vintage styled suits, but I recently bought a seersucker suit for a wedding last June. It strikes me as possible that wearing a polyester blend white, ivory or a dark wool jacket might not be conductive to wearing at a dance. So I'm looking at my closet and I see this great seersucker suit. Is seersucker acceptable, especially out of season at a dance?
Here's the deal. I'm 33, male, no main squeeze or really anybody. I just finished graduate school. I've found that swing dancing is a great way to meet other, educated and fairly young people. I am trying to go to as many dances as I can. However, I sometimes find myself a sweaty mess and want to look my best in a hot gymnasium or some kind of nightclub. I especially don't want people to think I'm there to look pretty. I go to these dances and maybe in 4 hours, might dance between 12 and 16 times. So active, but not athletically so.
Seersucker is a classic American fabric (I'm Canadian of course), made of cotton, derived from an Indian word (shurshaker) for puckered. I know about the technical parts of the fabric. I just want to know if it looks odd at a dance or social occasion.
At some of these dances there are a lot of dames, probably in the 25-35 range who are fairly attractive, as as many of us know, the vintage community is small, but sometimes well to do. It takes a certain amount of gumption to go home, change out of jeans and put on a fancy party dress. Some of the guys who go to these dances think a tee shirt and "jorts" is appropriate. There are other guys, like me who really like to dress up.
Would it be too affected to put on a waistcoat, seersucker suit, long tie, spectator shoes and a fedora (taken off at the dance).
On that topic, at a formal dance (that is a swing dance with a formal dress code), should I be buying a zoot suit, or is that something you wear once, then it looks old fast? I'd think that a zoot suit in black could be worn to several different dance venues, but if I wore it more than once at each party, people might think it's my only period suit? Or worse, they're thinking I'm showing off money or capacity to spend. I can't exactly wear a zoot suit to work or church, so it would be something which gets used maybe 3-6 times in it's lifetime? The economists call my job "gold collar" and I have the money in the bank to buy a new suit every month without any regret, but I don't want to buy something that gets used once and sent to the back of the closet?
Canadian
I own several vintage styled suits, but I recently bought a seersucker suit for a wedding last June. It strikes me as possible that wearing a polyester blend white, ivory or a dark wool jacket might not be conductive to wearing at a dance. So I'm looking at my closet and I see this great seersucker suit. Is seersucker acceptable, especially out of season at a dance?
Here's the deal. I'm 33, male, no main squeeze or really anybody. I just finished graduate school. I've found that swing dancing is a great way to meet other, educated and fairly young people. I am trying to go to as many dances as I can. However, I sometimes find myself a sweaty mess and want to look my best in a hot gymnasium or some kind of nightclub. I especially don't want people to think I'm there to look pretty. I go to these dances and maybe in 4 hours, might dance between 12 and 16 times. So active, but not athletically so.
Seersucker is a classic American fabric (I'm Canadian of course), made of cotton, derived from an Indian word (shurshaker) for puckered. I know about the technical parts of the fabric. I just want to know if it looks odd at a dance or social occasion.
At some of these dances there are a lot of dames, probably in the 25-35 range who are fairly attractive, as as many of us know, the vintage community is small, but sometimes well to do. It takes a certain amount of gumption to go home, change out of jeans and put on a fancy party dress. Some of the guys who go to these dances think a tee shirt and "jorts" is appropriate. There are other guys, like me who really like to dress up.
Would it be too affected to put on a waistcoat, seersucker suit, long tie, spectator shoes and a fedora (taken off at the dance).
On that topic, at a formal dance (that is a swing dance with a formal dress code), should I be buying a zoot suit, or is that something you wear once, then it looks old fast? I'd think that a zoot suit in black could be worn to several different dance venues, but if I wore it more than once at each party, people might think it's my only period suit? Or worse, they're thinking I'm showing off money or capacity to spend. I can't exactly wear a zoot suit to work or church, so it would be something which gets used maybe 3-6 times in it's lifetime? The economists call my job "gold collar" and I have the money in the bank to buy a new suit every month without any regret, but I don't want to buy something that gets used once and sent to the back of the closet?
Canadian