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There are, at least, many pictures where the belt is between the middle and top button of a 3-button suit. Moreover, the author does not do a good job of separating the continuing long-term trends of fashion from tired and out-dated guidelines/cliches. It has a lively tone and good humor throughout. Ugh. The biggest one is how high to wear your pants. The problem is, that's limited help in 2010. The section on color is pretty good, and it is an amusing book to page through. You don't want to remind people of a freaking flamingo.
There are many figures where, as best as I can tell, he honestly appears to suggest wearing your pants 1/3 of the way between your belly-button and nipples. This is a book that does a good job of gathering the collective wisdom of men's fashion from the 30's to 50's or so. Please, do NOT wear 4 different patterns in a suit. Actually, try to avoid 3 unless they are all very muted and somehow coordinated. Unfortunately, that wisdom doesn't fit in a catchy one-liner, so it doesn't travel as well.
A much better point of advice is to simply try on a few lengths of jacket and see which one gives the best proportionate look to your legs, arms, and torso. Many of the patterned items in this book are way too loud to be appropriate for modern workplace -- especially many of the black-and-white patterns. But in the end, it's a guide looking decades out-of-touch. A very modern, sleek man will find his long-term wadrobe's backbone is a group of carefully selected solids. He repeats another tired piece when it comes to jacket length (where the bottom of the coat is) as well: have it hang down to the thumb knuckle. Please, do not follow this book's advice and mix 3 patterns that are completely different. First of all, if you don't plan on wearing a suit all the time, this is really going to be limited in usefulness.
Pattern. If you have kind-of long legs and kind-of short arms, wearing your jacket down only to the thumb knuckle is going to make your legs look really long and your torso really small. Yes, it should probably be a few inches above where most college students wear their jeans, but you'll get snickers and weird looks all day if you wear your pants where this book suggests. What a useless piece of advice.
The book is written art work. One of the most informative books on men's dress ever. It covers not only the how to dress but the history of dress in an entertaining and well segmented volume.
In the beginning I was a little afraid that the author focuses too much on the British dressing style but he also successfully describes different styles such as the Italian. I really like this book. It has a lot of pictures which all illustrate different dressing styles.
If not, probably best to look elsewhere. If you're an American who aspires to dress like a 1940s matinee idol then this book is for you.
I'm satisfied with the book and recommend buying it to anyone truly interested in the art of dressing well. Reading, Mastering the Art of Permanent Fashion, will help separate you from the wannabes. Those interested in the changing winds of fashion may want to look elsewhere. Be warned, despite its title, this book concentrates on style creation. The book introduces several subtle fashion strategies you never would've noticed had you not read the book. Although it's short on color matching it made up for it with concrete style directions.
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