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@jimmyM80: methinks you're adressing the wrong segment of the dimple-market.
what would you recommend?
-guilty as charged!
If you scroll to the bottom of this page there are links to 5 other threads regarding getting a dimple in a tie. When searching for patents, there are no less than 6 products patented to assist in the creation of a dimple, some going back as far as 1939. Obviously I am not the only one who has struggled to consistently get a dimple. If you can get it on your own, great, the product isn't for everyone. However, for the rest of us who want a perfectly formed dimple and struggle to get one consistently, there is a product like the dimple clip that's just going to make it that much easier.
I'm not hating on your product, I'm hating on that website that tries to force you into not leaving. If I was ever going to potentially be a customer down the road, getting harangued by dialog boxes would shoot any possibility right out the window. Only desperate Appreciation sites pull that BS.
Dressing well is about the process. It's about learning and overcoming difficulties. It's about doing it the only correct way, which is how our grandfathers did it. Dressing well is about working with what you have, achieving the best result and being responsible for the failures and victories. Above all, dressing well is about teaching yourself discipline, neatness, skill and attention to details. Therefore, I do not approve of the tie dimpler. I'd rather re-do my ties 20 times, but do it with my own hands and be proud of the result.
If you scroll to the bottom of this page there are links to 5 other threads regarding getting a dimple in a tie.