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TB, think its just the "wash" of the jean. I prefer either much more worn in, or raw, that in between wash gets me a bit.
Me today:
JCrew
W&H
Epaulet
Alden
This coat looks interesting, what is it?
This coat looks interesting, what is it?
Or, as Yoda would have it, "Begun, the grammar wars have..."
What, you want to argue with a Jedi master about grammar?
Barbour flyweight something or other. Looks like the m65 less the top two pockets. Looked weird til it started getting dirty.
All Barbours look weird until they start getting dirty and crumpled; then they look great. It's why i don't own any though, as my life's pretty sedentary, so they never really get worn in enough.
Lazy day running a few errands around town, and then will be going out this evening:
re: the crew-neck T-shirt showing under the v-neck sweater. I know most here won't like it, but I'm kind of fond of it sometimes...
For reference: there's a bit more pattern/textural interest than it appears: the sweater has a marled sort of appearance up close, the jacket has a narrow herringbone weave to it, and the trousers have a faint glen-plaid pattern. From a distance, of course, everything's vaguely solid.
I think you need to choose your clothes in a way that lengthens your torso and appears to broaden your shoulders.. This fit pretty much does opposite of what you want.
Try lower rise pants that sit lower on your hips, hemmed with very little break. Also a sport coat with padded shoulders would be a good bet for you.
buy a barbour, overwax it, loan it to me for a week, I'll wear it at the forge 2-3 times, then brush it and it'll look three years old, instantly.
The "rule" that you shouldn't end a sentence in a preposition isn't an actual rule in the English Language. The confusion came because in Latin, sentences don't end with prepositions - ever. In most cases, when constructing a sentence in English it sounds best to put the preposition somewhere besides the very end; but if putting the preposition at the end of the sentence makes the sentence clearer, there's no reason not to.
After an overzealous editor attempted to rearrange one of Winston Churchill's sentences to avoid ending it in a preposition, the Prime Minister scribbled a single sentence in reply: "This is the sort of bloody nonsense up with which I will not put."
Barbour flyweight something or other. Looks like the m65 less the top two pockets. Looked weird til it started getting dirty.