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Thread: Handkerchiefs and Pocket Squares

  1. #321
    "A List" Customer Subvet642's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by OddSteve
    One question about pocket squares.

    I picked up a few inexpensive ones recently which are made of coloured silk.
    I found some directions on how to fold them here, but the fabric is so thin and soft that I tend to mess everything up when I finally tuck it in my suit pocket.

    Are pocket squares like that suitable for folding or do you just stuff them in your pocket and fiddle around until it looks good?
    I'm with Pip, just pull the center through your thumb and fore finger formed into a circle to make a "puff", then fold in half and stuff it in your pocket.
    Call me Mint Jelly, 'cause I'm on the lam! -- Abe Simpson

  2. #322
    "A List" Customer Highlander's Avatar
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    I am pretty much with subvet.. I grab the center of the square with my thumb and forefinger, pullit about half way, then tuck it into my suit pocket with the puff in front, and what ever else sticks out, sticks out....

    My Dad, a classic dresser (late 40's early 50's style) would always wear a very nice linen handkerchief, with a burgundy cursive M on it, and some curly ques on each side, folded and squared with about 3/4 inch showing to show the Monogram. Looked sharp.

    My GrandDad, also a classy dresser(more late 20's, 30's and 40's) used more of the puff look and more of the paisley silks. And often had his fountain pen in his suit pocket if not a pocket square.

  3. #323
    "In Chile..."
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    Quote Originally Posted by Marc Chevalier

    Four peaks: my favorite fold. Taught to me by my dad. Few people seem to know how to do it, for some reason.

    As demonstrated in this thread: http://www.thefedoralounge.com/showp...99&postcount=1


    Learn it ... love it ... live it!


    .

  4. #324
    Bartender jamespowers's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Subvet642
    I'm with Pip, just pull the center through your thumb and fore finger formed into a circle to make a "puff", then fold in half and stuff it in your pocket.
    Agreed wholeheartedly. If it takes more than a minute to fold a pocketsquare then you have moved from well dressed to the Fop category.
    People think they are so rebellious and original, when really they are just banal, boring and dumb.

  5. #325
    One Too Many Guttersnipe's Avatar
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    The fold I use isn't listed in the above link . . .

    . . . I fold lengthwise points similar to the "Sydney Opera House" but only has 3 points and is more floppy, and looks nothing like the Opera House; it's how my grandpa taught me to do it.

    I'm going to have to learn "Opera House" fold, though, it looks great!

    Who says the golden era has to be tasteful and dignified?

  6. #326
    "In Chile..."
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    Quote Originally Posted by jamespowers

    If it takes more than a minute to fold a pocketsquare then you have moved from well dressed to the Fop category.

    Agreed ... and I can do the "Sydney Opera House" fold in about 10 seconds.

    .

  7. #327
    "A List" Customer Chad Sanborn's Avatar
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    I must be the odd man out. As I stick with 2 basic ones. The 3 points mentions before and one other they call the 3 stairs. With the right square, this 3 step one is hard to beat!

  8. #328
    "A List" Customer Cigarband's Avatar
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    As Will Boehlke said in his blog “A Suitable Wardrobe”, it’s not acceptable to be insecure about when it’s OK to wear a pocket square. It’s always OK. If a man is wearing a jacket with an open breast pocket, the pocket should have a square in it.

    A well dressed man should always have a pocket square, generally complimenting the colors of his outfit, but never repeating a pattern. A white linen or silk square (depending on the texture of the rest of our outfit) almost always looks stylish, and a good quality pocket square helps the wearer achieve that elegant look between flamboyant and plain.

    A gentleman would not use a pocket square as a handkerchief and would never put it back in his pocket if he did. A second cotton handkerchief carried in an inside pocket can answer for any such functions.

    To which I would add: A true Silk pocket square is only about half a big as a standard cotton handkerchief. This so that it doesn’t push out the breast pocket as originally worn.
    Originally in this case being “as a complimentary accent and not as a formal addition to the ensemble. Thus: Place the pocket square fully opened upon a flat surface. With the first four fingers of the right hand, gather (pinch) the material in the center of the square, lift the square off the surface and allow to hang down. Now turn the hand palm up while continuing to allow the square to hang down. Now thrust the gathered end of the square into the breast pocket all the way to the bottom. Arrange the displayed ends of the square in a pleasing and nonchalant manner and voila!, your ensemble is complete."

    Translated from “The Boulevardier” Henri Ruchard, Paris 1903
    If it ain't old hat, I ain't interested. Tom Collins

  9. #329
    Familiar Face OddSteve's Avatar
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    Thank you for the advice - that seems to work for me!



    I like that jacket a lot for spring and summer, although it's sometimes hard to find a matching shirt and tie for it.
    If I'm dressing better than you - well, don't blame me!

  10. #330
    Call Me a Cab avedwards's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Cigarband
    A gentleman would not use a pocket square as a handkerchief and would never put it back in his pocket if he did. A second cotton handkerchief carried in an inside pocket can answer for any such functions.
    It can function as a bandage if you're hand gets shot (as happends to Charters in "The Lady Vanishes" when he uses Calditcott's pocket square). I'm guessing that doesn't happen very often though, or do any loungers have any interesting stories to tell?

    To which I would add: A true Silk pocket square is only about half a big as a standard cotton handkerchief. This so that it doesn’t push out the breast pocket as originally worn.
    I always use a hankerchief as a pocket square. If I don't fold it properly but go for the more informal look of pinching it and stuffing it in, my pocket bulges so much that I can't have my wallet in that inside pocket without looking like I'm carrying a concealed weapon. Would a smaller pocket square do the trick?

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