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by phren0logy 5039 days ago
Some random pointers from a guy who had a rough transition into needing to wear a tie every day:

1. Leave money in your clothing budget for alteration. A nice pair of pants with a bunch of fabric balled up around your ankles does not look like a nice pair of pants. Get something less expensive and alter it.

2. Grey pants match damn near anything. If you ask the cleaners, they'll press out the crease that runs down the legs and look a lot less "fussy."

3. Gross generalization, but $150 shoes last more than twice as long as $75 shoes. Hit up somewhere like Nordstrom Rack for good shoes. Same principal applies to belts.

4. If you buy a suit, avoid the current style of really skinny lapels and too-short sleeves and pants because it's going to look dated fast. Get a grey or blue two button suit, which is pretty versatile. Avoid big or padded shoulders, giant arm holes. Consider vents on each side ("double vented") rather than one vent in back which apparntly was designed for sitting in a saddle. And for god's sake don't buy a jacket you can't button comfortably. Then get it altered.

5. Don't feel compelled to use those little plastic collar points.

6. Plain shirt? Patterned tie. Or vice versa. Of you need to mix patterns, mix a large one with a different small one, but avoid this unless/until you know what you are doing. If you wear a tie, strongly consider a jacket.

3 comments

If I may expand on this, get everything altered. Seriously, find a tailor you like and can communicate with and let them go to town on your clothes. 50 dollar pants with 30 bucks of tailoring will fit better than 300 dollar pants with no tailoring just about every time.
I don't know why I resisted this initially (likely the hassle), but now alterations are Step 2 of buying work clothing.

Looking forward to trying out some custom fit stuff eventually, but for now alterations are essential.

"3. Gross generalization, but $150 shoes last more than twice as long as $75 shoes. Hit up somewhere like Nordstrom Rack for good shoes. Same principal applies to belts."

In particular, I'd recommend cole haan shoes with the nike air stuff built into them. They're amazingly comfortable.

"5. Don't feel compelled to use those little plastic collar points." The metal ones are quite nice and can help keep up a shirt's appearance over time.

"If you wear a tie, strongly consider a jacket." I disagree. Shirt and tie is just fine. Jacket can absolutely make it better as can vest or sweater; however, no biggie if not.

I feel your pain brother.