Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

Suit jacket, fashion suicide?

sola fide

One of the Regulars
Messages
152
Location
San Fran Bay Area
I see what look like very nice suit jackets, pinstriped, gaberdine solids, etc.. for sale. Is it acceptable to wear a suit jackets such as double breasted pinstripe with solid slacks or is it fashion suicide?
Thank you
Michael
 

shadowrider

One of the Regulars
Messages
258
Location
Italy
Generally speaking, I think the rule is that pinstriped jackets, or any jacket that looks obviously as part of a two piece suit, does not work with odd trousers.
 
Messages
18,930
Location
Central California
Kind of what I suspected, like misfits in toy land, beautiful jackets with no pants to match. How sad

I agree. If it looks like it belongs to a suit it won't look right with odd trousers. If it looks like it could have started life as a blazer or sport coat then go for it, but I don't think I've ever seen a pinstripe or chalk stripe jacket that did not look like it was part of a suit. A lot of the glen plaid or POW suit jackets look fine worn with odd trousers as do some of the windowpane patterns.
 

Edward

Bartender
Messages
24,779
Location
London, UK
Contemporary fashion "rules" frown on it, but it was very common back in the thirties. Bear inmind that most people then had maybe one good suit that was worn reguarly, and couldn't justify throwing out a perfectly good jacket just because the trousers wore out. If it looks good, do it, though I would personally make sure there is a fair level of contract between jacket and trews so that it looks deliberate rather than a vain attempt to pass it off as a two piece lounge suit.
 

Guttersnipe

One Too Many
Messages
1,942
Location
San Francisco, CA
Contemporary fashion "rules" frown on it, but it was very common back in the thirties. Bear inmind that most people then had maybe one good suit that was worn reguarly, and couldn't justify throwing out a perfectly good jacket just because the trousers wore out. If it looks good, do it, though I would personally make sure there is a fair level of contract between jacket and trews so that it looks deliberate rather than a vain attempt to pass it off as a two piece lounge suit.

Why is it that I always find myself echoing Edward's posts? I guess great (sartorial) minds think alike ;)

I would just add that with non-striped patterns, like checks or prominent weaves, combining with solid trousers is always a good idea, and in the case of especially bold patterns - such as windowpanes, for example - it's even preferable. But the inverse, pattern trousers with solid coats, almost never works.
 
Messages
16,862
Location
New York City
On the stripes, there are also some - old - exceptions... There is a very nice Laurence Fellows illustration showing how you could break an apparently flannel chalk stripes grey trousers in a perfectly acceptable manner (at least on the drawing :)

View media item 1720

Based on illustrations like yours, old editions of Apparel Arts and movies from the '30s, the '30s were a time of a lot of creative mixing and matching of patterns, colors and textures. You can feel somewhat of a "lock down" after the '30s as more-conservative rules took hold from the '40s on (there are always exceptions).

But IMHO, if you like "adventurous" combinations in men's attire - within the modern construct of suit-sport coat-tie etc. that began to coalesce at the end of the '20s - then the '30s is the best decade.

You'll see some echo of that in Ralph Lauren advertisements and displays today, but not too many people wear those combos even if they buy the individual clothes shown.
 
Last edited:

vallettavalentine

New in Town
Messages
36
Location
West Haven, CT USA
I buy separates all the time, and I just make sure the particular shade of whichever colour matches by taking the item to be matched along with me. If you don't like to be too matchy, just look to the Ivy League styles--blue blazers and light khakis are a big example.
 

Edward

Bartender
Messages
24,779
Location
London, UK
Why is it that I always find myself echoing Edward's posts? I guess great (sartorial) minds think alike ;)

I would just add that with non-striped patterns, like checks or prominent weaves, combining with solid trousers is always a good idea, and in the case of especially bold patterns - such as windowpanes, for example - it's even preferable. But the inverse, pattern trousers with solid coats, almost never works.


Perhaps ironic that men's formal daywear involves plain top and patterned (albeit conservatively so) trousers. Or then there's the variation of Highland dress often favoured by military types, which replaces the kilt with tatan trews. Less seen, of course for the most part - which, of course, goes back to the fact htat ghe patterned trousers were most often part of a suit, and wore out first.

(Which makes me think of one big advantage to the kilt: it doesn't have that round the crotch / between the legs high-wearing spot, which must make it longer lasting, all other things being equal!)
 

Nobert

Practically Family
Messages
832
Location
In the Maine Woods
Or then there's the variation of Highland dress often favoured by military types, which replaces the kilt with tatan trews.

I find it hard to imagine feeling especially girded on the field of battle with such an open, vulnerable spot as a kilt would entail. Not to say that warriors haven't engaged with even less. We know that the Scots got much of their culture from the Irish, but apparently the Eire tradition of going into combat au naturel was a little bit extreme, even for them. "Now, ye'll taeste tha wrath of my Claymore, ye Irish...Oh, for God's saeke, put on a skairt, man!"
 

Guttersnipe

One Too Many
Messages
1,942
Location
San Francisco, CA
Perhaps ironic that men's formal daywear involves plain top and patterned (albeit conservatively so) trousers. Or then there's the variation of Highland dress often favoured by military types, which replaces the kilt with tatan trews. Less seen, of course for the most part - which, of course, goes back to the fact htat ghe patterned trousers were most often part of a suit, and wore out first.

(Which makes me think of one big advantage to the kilt: it doesn't have that round the crotch / between the legs high-wearing spot, which must make it longer lasting, all other things being equal!)

It is odd that the only "official" uses of patterned trousers and solid jackets (that I can think of) are morning wear and Scottish evening wear. I'm not sure where the tradition comes from with morning wear; as for the latter I've always thought the look was inspired by the full dress uniforms of the Highland Light Infantry, and few other lowland regiments who wore trews.

Here's some HLI officers circa 1932. Bonus points if you can spot Second Lieutenant David Niven!

post-873-047363500%201291178595.jpg
 

Edward

Bartender
Messages
24,779
Location
London, UK
It would be interesting to trace the history of the trews. There is a lowland connection, of course: back before the Jacobite rising, the Lowlanders all wore trousers, whle the Highlanders stuck to the Great Kilt. Lowlanders who joined the Jacobite cause adopted the kilt as it became a political symbol of resistance against the Hanoverians. What I'm not clear on is how equestrian the Lowlanders traditionally were. THe Highlanders were not (for obvious reasons). As a rule across the globe, trouser-type garments developed in equestrian cultures, while those which eschewed horseback were mor likely to tend to a loose robe. (General rule, not necessarily universal.) The Romans, for instance, wore the toga - for the most part, they used their horses to pull chariots, not ridden on. I recall reading they didn't care for trousers much, though they made an exception for the sale of awarm underlayer in Winter in Britannia!
 

Mathematicus

A-List Customer
Messages
379
Location
Coventry, UK
It can be done, but one must be very careful to not look like a circus manager or a unemployed man from depression era (unless that is the look you want).

The point is that the overall look depends on the type of stripes and fabric.

Modern suit coats with sheen-ish fabric and thin, very close pinstripes are a no-go for separates, unless you look exactly for the mismatched, orphaned jacket look (which, in my humble opinion, never looked good). Dotted stripes, in particular, look terrible when worn as separates.

A coat with a fuzzier fabric, like for instance flannel, together with wide-spaced chalkstripes could work if the trousers have a similar flannel-like fabric and the colours are well constrasting. Also, it helps that the stripes have discreet colour.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
107,231
Messages
3,031,575
Members
52,699
Latest member
Bergsma112
Top