[-] DanHakimi@mastodon.social 1 points 6 months ago

@toothpaste_sandwich alright. I'll tell you, I've never seen the "chest warmer" in person, it looks pretty silly to me, but if it keeps you warm, enjoy it.

[-] DanHakimi@mastodon.social 0 points 6 months ago

@toothpaste_sandwich I'll never understand why people upvote these random, pointless infographics. Most of these are, obviously, ridiculous made-up nonsense made to fill out a listicle with a number you've never seen before. Don't worry, if there's a worthwhile way to tie a scarf, you already know about it.

[-] DanHakimi@mastodon.social 5 points 6 months ago

@Quintus Yeah, I get some discomfort from a compliment, like... I'm not sure what to do, do I thank them? Do I just say "I know!" Do I express humility? I don't believe half the compliments I get.

Getting into clothes has helped. I am proud of my style, it's unique, and I have enough of the haters, I am tired of them. When people compliment my style, it's not mere flattery—it's a statement of mutual understanding that fosters a deeper connection. And we can talk about the clothes.

[-] DanHakimi@mastodon.social 2 points 7 months ago

@ohwhatfollyisman @Black_Gulaman

This isn't a fashion question and it's not a life choice.

It's a style question and it's a style choice.

some social constructs are enjoyable. Some people enjoy developing their taste in aesthetic fields. it's okay.

that's why this community exists. If you don't like it, I recommend you unsubscribe.

[-] DanHakimi@mastodon.social 2 points 7 months ago

@Jilanico

  1. People generally like to layer darker layers over lighter layers. It's not, as the other user suggested, a "rule," it's just a good approach to layering different colors. You put on a shirt, then a tie, then a jacket—white, color, dark—and it'll probably work. The other way around doesn't work nearly as consistently.

(I tried posting this from kbin, but apparently lemmy.world defederated with them...)

[-] DanHakimi@mastodon.social 2 points 7 months ago

@Jilanico

  1. It's very hard to dye silk white (or at least it was, historically). The bowtie in white tie is marcella cotton.

  2. White shirts are the most common. A white necktie would have been hard to pair with most wardrobes, more likely to get dirty (you don't want to have to get your tie cleaned, it's a whole thing).

[-] DanHakimi@mastodon.social 2 points 7 months ago

@Jilanico

"white tie" is a distinct dress code involving a white bowtie. Outside of that, there's no real history of people wearing white neckwear. This is for a few reasons:

  1. The purpose of a tie in an outfit is generally to bring in new colors and textures. A white cotton shirt, a dark worsted wool suit, and a bright colorful tie with a silky sheen and intricate pattern... There's a whole history around the British falling in love with paisley and using it as a display of wealth.
[-] DanHakimi@mastodon.social 3 points 7 months ago

@malefashionadvice

Alright.

You guys appear to have defederated with kbin, but it seems I can post to lemmy.world from mastodon, but it doesn't appear that I can make a link post on lemmy through mastodon. Interesting.

I wish I could just use a lemmy web interface with my mastodon account... I'll figure it out eventually.

8

The Many Transformations of the Double Breasted Jacket

https://thesecondbutton.com/button-a-db/

@malefashionadvice

[-] DanHakimi@mastodon.social 1 points 7 months ago

@BudgetBandit it really depends on what you're into. Like, I could tell you to follow @ZachWeinersmith for SMBC-type humor, or me for menswear, or @GovTrack to track US Government voting patterns, or...

But that's not really a useful way to talk. You could always go through explore, but I also don't think that's a great approach.

It would be best if you told us what you wanted to see here and we helped you find it.

DanHakimi

joined 7 years ago