Fletch
I'll Lock Up
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Browsing some old threads over at the Ask Andy and 10,000 Other Guys About Clothes Forum, I came upon a thought-provoking statement of principles about style (or fashion) in a discussion about the 3-roll-2 jacket.
Now I know they tolerate a rather more bare-knuckle tone over at Ask Andy than they do here at FL, and this particular thread had already seen its share of set-tos. So perhaps the poster wasn't in his most broadminded mood. But I sense he was pointing a veiled finger at FL - in any case, he had less than kind words for those who don't move with the times.
He seems to suggest - and maybe there's something to it - that true taste style lie outside one's own preferences, and may even overrule them. That dressing well is about being relevant, being connected to others, and - to some degree anyway - fitting in. And that it may actually show the best taste to change with the times just for the sake of the times.
How about you, fellow Loungers? Are you "dogmatic" - "scientific" - in your tastes, or do you approach them as "art"? Do you ape film stills or, worse, illustrations without a thought for originality? What would you say to someone who told you so?
Have you thought about what it means for you, as an intelligent human being, to take your style cues from a culture you can't really be part of - in fact, one that has all but ceased to function?
What do you think of "Of course not" as an answer to the question "Do people dress today as they did in Year X?" How about to "May people dress today as in Year X?"
Have you thought about what it means to be "well-dressed for today"? Do you even want to?
What, finally, is this guy saying? Why might he be saying it?
Hopefully some or all of this may jog your curiosity. I'd welcome anyone's opinions, or counter-opinions.
Now I know they tolerate a rather more bare-knuckle tone over at Ask Andy than they do here at FL, and this particular thread had already seen its share of set-tos. So perhaps the poster wasn't in his most broadminded mood. But I sense he was pointing a veiled finger at FL - in any case, he had less than kind words for those who don't move with the times.
He seems to suggest - and maybe there's something to it - that true taste style lie outside one's own preferences, and may even overrule them. That dressing well is about being relevant, being connected to others, and - to some degree anyway - fitting in. And that it may actually show the best taste to change with the times just for the sake of the times.
How about you, fellow Loungers? Are you "dogmatic" - "scientific" - in your tastes, or do you approach them as "art"? Do you ape film stills or, worse, illustrations without a thought for originality? What would you say to someone who told you so?
Have you thought about what it means for you, as an intelligent human being, to take your style cues from a culture you can't really be part of - in fact, one that has all but ceased to function?
What do you think of "Of course not" as an answer to the question "Do people dress today as they did in Year X?" How about to "May people dress today as in Year X?"
Have you thought about what it means to be "well-dressed for today"? Do you even want to?
What, finally, is this guy saying? Why might he be saying it?
Hopefully some or all of this may jog your curiosity. I'd welcome anyone's opinions, or counter-opinions.
Dressing well is an art, not a science. Science presumes that there is one true, correct answer. Art does not. Science is to a great degree static - the journey mostly ends once we've solved for 'x', once we've discovered the answer, once we've come up with the formula that makes sense. Art is not static - it evolves.
We all know great art when we see it, and we all know trash or 'art' when we see it. We all also can tell the differences between similarly great works of art, even if we don't agree with the premise behind it - can one really say a Renoir is 'better' or 'worse' than Dali? So of course we can tell when someone is better/worse dressed, and being able to distinguish between variations of 'well-dressed' does not mean we lose the ability to discriminate between 'well-dressed' and 'not well-dressed'.
The problem with a great deal of this (and other) 'fashion/style' forums is that people become fixated with what they've taken to be (or made) dogma, and dressing up like some 50s movie star they've nominated as their 'style paragon'.
Even stranger, they attempt to copy looks off illustrations made in the 30s/40s/50s. Did Prince Edward VIII copy his 'looks' off cartoons and line drawings of people in the 1900s or 1890s? Of course not. Does Rubinacci copy a jacket's cut exactly off a 60s catalogue? Of course he doesn't. Does the Savile Row of today look exactly like the Savile Row of 1950? Of course not.
Dogma implies unchanging, inflexible. Art isn't - style isn't. If you want to dress in every way like someone considered well-dressed from the 50s or 60s, more power to you. But you're not well-dressed for today. You're well dressed for the 50s or 60s. There is a difference between 'new' and 'worse'. And to sepia-tone a 'golden age' of men's dress as hold it up as some form of 'lost ideal' is just sheer ridiculous - so there weren't any shabbily dressed people in that halcyon age?
My 0.02.