Trans man here, first time I wore a suit was for a wedding. I buttoned the bottom button while trying on the jacket, went, "eh, that looks weird," and left it unbuttoned. Got gobsmacked when every other guy at the wedding also left the bottom button unbuttoned.
At my own wedding I had the button unbuttoned and my mom essentially pulled me aside and did that whisper yell thing about how it should always be buttoned, I started to argue it shouldn’t be, but she seemed confident enough that I was like, maybe that was just a rule I dreamed or a young dude thing? And so I buttoned it and got laughed at by other friends. And I knew, I f’n knew
"Your buttons are fitted slip-fashion at the waist. Who told you to do that?" "It . . . seemed the right way." And Kynes rubbed his cheek, thinking of the legend: "He shall know your ways as though born to them."
@@joegibbskins giving her the benefit of the doubt, ladies' fashion DOES dictate that you button every button on your shirts and jackets. HOWEVER she should definitely know by now that that's not how men's fashion works and shouldn't be pulling a, "oh my sweet baby boy, you just don't know how to dress yourself without your mother", move on you. Sorry that happened.
I'm a trans woman and I was also never taught, because I was a woman. Everyone just knew in the back of their minds by my cosmic aura not to teach me man stuff because I'm a woman.
@@dunkawunka2278 why say tall woman when you've been a woman all along. It's a modifier my friend, and it's relevant because it relates to something he said in the video :)
The insecurity of it is not in him always having to wear that damn hat (it's the same every time too) but him being incapable of even laughing at himself about it.
I think it's cause if he took the beanie off, the sun rays would reflect off of his bald cranium and end up blinding everyone and potentially even ripping a new hole in the ozone layer
I’m a straight, mostly not care about anything I wear guy that usually wears shorts and a t-shirt most days and I knew without anybody telling me that buttoning the bottom button on a suit coat looks goofy as hell. Also, Tim Pool continues to make me feel like the ultimate balding chad that will never shave off his foot and a half or lucious locks.
Vaush thinking that every person has their father show them the unwritten ethics of wearing a suit as "one of the first things you get taught as a young man" is so off the mark it's funny -- like hearing bill gates guessing grocery store prices
Firstly he mentioned nothing about father’s. Secondly, I’m a high-schooler from a lower middle class home and even I knew you don’t button the bottom button. I mean one it just looks like shit if you do, so he should’ve been able to extrapolate that you don’t from that, two every other picture you can find of people wearing suits online will not have the bottom button buttoned, and three Tim Pool comes from a rich background, is a public figure, and he talks about politics, a profession where people wear suits all the time. He has no excuse for not knowing this extremely basic thing.
That tradition of not buttoning the bottom button came from some king being too obese to button his own coat all the way, so he outlawed anyone else from doing it. So that's why I do it out of spite, and tell anyone who asks why.
This is a modern myth and an obvious one, too. If I wasn't drunk right now, I'd write a whole mini-essay about how this is the perfect example for all the signs of a modern myth.
This is both 1. Untrue, and 2. A misunderstood anecdote. The myth is that an English king (one of the Georgians) became too fat to button his waistcoat and so he started a trend to leave the bottom button unfastened. Kings wouldn't have worn modern suit jackets in that period because they didn't exist.
At this point the beanie has fused to what little brain matter is left. He looks like a kid going to church before his mom yells at him to ditch the beanie.
You don't button the bottom button because it's both uncomfortable when you sit, and looks like shit. It makes the coat stiff, and when you walk it doesn't flow with your movements.
I bought a cheap second-hand wedding dress and we spent big moneys on my husband's dark purple suit with high rise trousers, because I DEMANDED it. They're HOT. And Vaush's date fit is insanely good. Dayum. Those colors too. 10/10 perfection.
Low rise pants change the look of the proportion of your body. Low rise pants make it look like your hips start lower. In women, their hips will curve at that point and it works. For most men, that doesn’t work. It makes you look like your torso is 2x the size of your legs. For both men and women, high rise pants cuts the torso and makes the legs look longer.
The button thing is such a class thing. I'm 32, AMAB, and never worn a suit in my life. I wouldn't have a fucking clue what buttons go where, and it's cringe af to hear people talk about it like we all attend upper class pool parties in $3k suits on weekends.
I googled image 'two button suits' just to see if anyone else buttons the bottom one, and there are literally several top results that warn you never to button the bottom one.
This legitimately earned my sub. I am forlorn every single time I go shopping for pants. The new trend of everything being low rise makes me furious and deeply uncomfortable. Men's apparel is trash right now unless you are wealthy enough for tailoring.
We were involved in Vietnam in one way or another since WWII. The republicants in Congress were pushing LBJ to escalate the "police action" in Vietnam. He didn't want to start a full scale war but he was trapped. Nixon meddled, telling North Vietnam he would give them a better deal. Nixon ran his campaign on ending the war then kept us there until 1975. Nixon also spent more money on the war in Vietnam.
Vaush talks about fashion like he read a big book called "The Rules of Fashion" and now he's going around to people listing off all of the rules they're breaking.
The Dunning Kruger effect in action. Maybe at one point he'll learn enough about fashion to not come off like a Philosophy 101 student who just discovered Nietzche.
Vaush's date night outfit was fire AF, unironically giving green flags, taking this dude home vibe. Who knew my hind brain could be hijacked by high waisted pants.
It's not just branding, Pool puts so much stock into him being perceived as a 2005 cool skater dude. He spent millions on a personal skate park, of course he'll wear a beanie at Mar-a-Lago.
If you don't want to shake someone's hand and you know it's coming, PICK YOUR NOSE, then when they reach out their hand tell them you just picked your nose and haven't washed your hand yet. They'll appreciate and respect your honestly, won't want to shake your hand, and might even laugh. Make sure to wash your hands immediately after.
For anyone wondering: all suits have one extra button, it's so that if the used button(s) fall off, you can use the bottom one to find a replacement. You aren't taking the bottom button and moving up, rather they're identical so it lets you know the exact size, shape, and colour you need. That's also why you aren't supposed to button this extra button - so that you don't risk *it* falling off so you lose your reference point. If it falls off on its own, that's what the extra button hole is for (to check size and height) and since you haven't used it there's no risk of it being stretched. Three-button suits go by the 'sometimes, always, never' rule. Double breasted suits have the spare on the chest. Et cetera.
i only learned this the first time I wore formal wear at 30, but i googled it. the rule is, from bottom up, *never, always, sometimes.* never button the bottom, if there are more than two, consider both clasped and unclasped for the topmost depending on aesthetic. the second button up is always designed to look best clasped.
The point of a firm handshake isn't to squeeze the other person into submission. The point is to squeeze just tight enough to assert your presence while making it clear that you both could squeeze tighter but also choose not to squeeze tighter out of mutual respect for the other party's presence. Make yourself known while making it mutually understood the other party is also known.
Takes like 2 sec to google so take this with a grain of salt: 1. Both buttons were done up prior to Edward VII due to most jackets being riding jackets. Edward popularized the suit jacket and only did up the top button so it was easier to mount and ride. 2. These days it is entirely aesthetic, though having only the top button does give you slightly more mobility. 3. There is at least 1 reddit user that suggests that the bottom button is only for maintaining the suit shape while hanging.
The reason to not button the lower one is because king Edward VII was fat so he left it unbuttoned, then everyone else did the same out of respect. Vaush being a monarchist unintentionally due to being a slave to fashion is funny. The focus on the button and not the damn beanie is the worst Vaush fashion take so far.
This is a real historical style called a paddock coat. It wouldn't really annoy anyone bc the button placement would be different, it's essentially a true three-button jacket without a bottom button
I hate how much of my brain is devoted to men's fashion. I am a trans woman and started wearing suits on a somewhat regular basis at 12, which continued until I was 20. In the last seven years I have worn a suit one time, and it was a men's suit I bought for my friend's wedding and had altered to fit my proportions. Pantsuits are almost all completely hideous and it simply DOESN'T have to be this way. At this point I'm thinking about just buying a cricut and a sewing machine and making suits for women that blend a feminine fit with the fine conventions practiced by habadashers.
I was never taught how to tie a tie, now I’m trans. Fathers, raise your boys right or they will be one of the girlies wearing cat ears being cringe online.
3:09 I was never told to not button the bottom button on a two button suit growing up, no one told me any kind of suit etiquette, I just kinda got some and people had me wear them and button them all up
You don’t button the bottom button. The origin of the tradition is interesting but not important. The most important reason today is that modern suits, unless you specifically tailor them, are not made for it to be used. As Vaush mention. However it is worth mentioning that suits that are made for all buttons to be used exists. But they are an extreme rarity and cannot be bought off the rack or be fitted at a tailor from an existing suit.
If you are sitting, or about to put your hand in your pockets the bottom button should be unbuttoned. Hell, id say if sitting have the jacket open if possible. If posing for a picture, i feel like i dont mind buttons done, only of hands arent in the dang pockets like every picture tim has done.
The Beanie is the Real Tim Pool. The "Tim Pool" with the face we see, is just a meat puppet The Beanie uses to move around and manipulate its environment.
I'm a tailor for 35 yrs and people's needs have changed over that time so bottom buttons come n go which n is fine if you are a thinker and look to see how it looks
Button rule explained more brieflierly: dead rich guy got fat Aside: Some of my clothes came with the spare button sewn in rather than on the tag, Considering the one button rule and the cuffs, my sport jacket has 7.
His branding? No, it's his balding.
It’s both😂
It's gotta be more than that. I think the head is misshapen.
I've known a guy for about 2 years now, I've legit never seen him take his baseball cap off. Bro's gotta be hiding a devious hairline under there
He 'could' wear a fez
You beat me to it.
Trans man here, first time I wore a suit was for a wedding. I buttoned the bottom button while trying on the jacket, went, "eh, that looks weird," and left it unbuttoned. Got gobsmacked when every other guy at the wedding also left the bottom button unbuttoned.
At my own wedding I had the button unbuttoned and my mom essentially pulled me aside and did that whisper yell thing about how it should always be buttoned, I started to argue it shouldn’t be, but she seemed confident enough that I was like, maybe that was just a rule I dreamed or a young dude thing? And so I buttoned it and got laughed at by other friends. And I knew, I f’n knew
@@joegibbskins if they were good friends I'd have immediately punched my palm and went "mom tricked me!" Just really lean into it lol.
"Your buttons are fitted slip-fashion at the waist. Who told you to do that?"
"It . . . seemed the right way."
And Kynes rubbed his cheek, thinking of the legend: "He shall know your ways as though born to them."
@@joegibbskins giving her the benefit of the doubt, ladies' fashion DOES dictate that you button every button on your shirts and jackets. HOWEVER she should definitely know by now that that's not how men's fashion works and shouldn't be pulling a, "oh my sweet baby boy, you just don't know how to dress yourself without your mother", move on you. Sorry that happened.
My edible kicked in right as the LBJ pants bit came on and it cured my mental illness stg.
I felt the LBJ clip so hard but this comment goes even harder, I feel ethereally connected to this 🧘♀️
I was not paying attention to the video until this came on.
I am morbidly confused
😆😭
RIP transmascs who never got taught button rules. Thank you Vaush.
i mean by far most cis women know about this rule, too. so clearly people are teaching this to female presenting people, too.
lol yes, have never owned a suit yet and this video saved me from possible future embarrassment
@@jurgnobs1308 Depends on your age and your parent's financial class.
@@killeravocado My two dress jackets are non buttoned and one buttoned, thank god.
@@hopeiswherethehomeis9606 yea, that's true
Can we talk about how that one chatter thinks cameras were invented like 60 years ago lmao
Chat has really been showing its age range recently.
KEKW
The beanie never comes off because
Tim is actually a living LEGO person
It's just a big stud at the top
Im ded
One day he hopes to become a real boy
Everything about Tim Pool is just insufferable.
I'm a trans woman and I was also never taught, because I was a woman. Everyone just knew in the back of their minds by my cosmic aura not to teach me man stuff because I'm a woman.
You say that yet you're not rushing to teach her the man things. Cosmic feminine aura stays winning. @@RegioVlogsMty
@@RegioVlogsMty how's wrong taste my guy?
So why say trans if youve been a woman all along
@@dunkawunka2278 why say tall woman when you've been a woman all along. It's a modifier my friend, and it's relevant because it relates to something he said in the video :)
@@arowace498 cosmic feminine aura always stay winning 👍
Tim, just embrace baldness. It's worse to hide it, makes you look insecure
Nah fr, I'm bald rn from chemo and I was never as insecure about it as he seems
But why care what you look like to background people? 🤷♂️
@@kekistani_meme_farmer7242 It's a part of being a public figure.
@@kekistani_meme_farmer7242 Lol, a rightoid with main character syndrome. What else is new.
The insecurity of it is not in him always having to wear that damn hat (it's the same every time too) but him being incapable of even laughing at himself about it.
Roger Stone looks like a 7 year old heading to private school wearing his older brother's hand-me-downs that he'll have to grow into
Do not forget his Richard Nixon back tattoo
Literally learned from 90's yaoi manga how good high waste pants look, been obsessed with that look since my teenage years.
Men's fashions in yaoi and BL don't play.
A short history, but a long legacy. RIP Lyndon Big Balls Johnson
I love LBJ recordings the guy once had a discussion with actual cabinet members about comparing penis sizes.
Vaush objectively has better fashion sense than every conservative man I’ve met.
Hearing LBJ say “down by my crotch, where the balls hang…” made my day
Men litteraly have only 1 kind of high fashion and we still mess it up
Y’all should wear dresses
Dresses are easy to wear
@@adeer87manly flowy stuff just needs to be more common
@@adeer87dresses are great because you don't have to wear pants, too bad I'm too cowardly to wear a dress
@@adeer87no, not good enough defense stats.
@@angelantayhua3096 you get the bonus to agility, though
Mr "I'm not a conservative" at Mar-A-Lago. Keep telling yourself that Tim.
Finally, Vaush talked fashion in a way that entertains me.
Tim Pool thinks his beanie is a cool gimmick because he knows he’s otherwise not memorable enough as a person lol.
The guy is so try hard at trying to appear cool. From his beanie to his fake sword he puts on his wall to the skater aesthetic he constantly messes up
I would like to meet the beanie far more than the beanier
I swear, that beanie is tim pools actual head.
You remove his beanie and a giant monster pops out of his head like that one Ed Edd n Eddy episode
I think it's cause if he took the beanie off, the sun rays would reflect off of his bald cranium and end up blinding everyone and potentially even ripping a new hole in the ozone layer
I’m a straight, mostly not care about anything I wear guy that usually wears shorts and a t-shirt most days and I knew without anybody telling me that buttoning the bottom button on a suit coat looks goofy as hell. Also, Tim Pool continues to make me feel like the ultimate balding chad that will never shave off his foot and a half or lucious locks.
When I need to dress up is when I care about fashion. Nothing like a nice fitting suit and a sharp tie
Maybe the beanie just IS his hair and it's all congealed into the shape of his iconic hat because he's been wearing it for so long.
The LBJ pants was amazing, the Trump handshake is a dbag move. Like a sucker punch handshake. A handshake isn’t a competition.
Vaush thinking that every person has their father show them the unwritten ethics of wearing a suit as "one of the first things you get taught as a young man" is so off the mark it's funny -- like hearing bill gates guessing grocery store prices
I had two father figures. None of them mentioned the button thing.
I might be wrong but did he even say the word "father" in this?
He did mention the tailor you buy the suit from might also teach you, dummy
@@REALASUNDERhe didn’t.
Firstly he mentioned nothing about father’s. Secondly, I’m a high-schooler from a lower middle class home and even I knew you don’t button the bottom button. I mean one it just looks like shit if you do, so he should’ve been able to extrapolate that you don’t from that, two every other picture you can find of people wearing suits online will not have the bottom button buttoned, and three Tim Pool comes from a rich background, is a public figure, and he talks about politics, a profession where people wear suits all the time. He has no excuse for not knowing this extremely basic thing.
I learned this the first time I ever wore a suit at my communion in second grade
That tradition of not buttoning the bottom button came from some king being too obese to button his own coat all the way, so he outlawed anyone else from doing it. So that's why I do it out of spite, and tell anyone who asks why.
Lmao that's hillarious
This is a modern myth and an obvious one, too. If I wasn't drunk right now, I'd write a whole mini-essay about how this is the perfect example for all the signs of a modern myth.
@@grmpf
Please do eventually
@@grmpf Whatever the real reason is, it's definitely not any better.
This is both 1. Untrue, and 2. A misunderstood anecdote. The myth is that an English king (one of the Georgians) became too fat to button his waistcoat and so he started a trend to leave the bottom button unfastened. Kings wouldn't have worn modern suit jackets in that period because they didn't exist.
tim rocking the 'my parents don't know I'm wearing a suit to homecoming" tranmasc fit
I love how the no bottom button thing was caused by a british king be to fat to button it. Thus everyone else coppied him because its the king
At this point the beanie has fused to what little brain matter is left.
He looks like a kid going to church before his mom yells at him to ditch the beanie.
You don't button the bottom button because it's both uncomfortable when you sit, and looks like shit. It makes the coat stiff, and when you walk it doesn't flow with your movements.
That photo screams "bring your kid to work day" lmao
As soon as I saw this photo, I knew we’d get a voosh fashion seg. I’ve honestly learned a lot about menswear because of the fashion arc.
I bought a cheap second-hand wedding dress and we spent big moneys on my husband's dark purple suit with high rise trousers, because I DEMANDED it. They're HOT. And Vaush's date fit is insanely good. Dayum. Those colors too. 10/10 perfection.
Low rise pants change the look of the proportion of your body. Low rise pants make it look like your hips start lower. In women, their hips will curve at that point and it works. For most men, that doesn’t work. It makes you look like your torso is 2x the size of your legs. For both men and women, high rise pants cuts the torso and makes the legs look longer.
I can't do high-rise pants. I have long limbs and a short torso
When I was young high raise trousers were just trousers. I hate that it's often hard to get women's jeans that go to the waist!
The button thing is such a class thing. I'm 32, AMAB, and never worn a suit in my life. I wouldn't have a fucking clue what buttons go where, and it's cringe af to hear people talk about it like we all attend upper class pool parties in $3k suits on weekends.
I googled image 'two button suits' just to see if anyone else buttons the bottom one, and there are literally several top results that warn you never to button the bottom one.
This legitimately earned my sub. I am forlorn every single time I go shopping for pants. The new trend of everything being low rise makes me furious and deeply uncomfortable. Men's apparel is trash right now unless you are wealthy enough for tailoring.
We were involved in Vietnam in one way or another since WWII. The republicants in Congress were pushing LBJ to escalate the "police action" in Vietnam. He didn't want to start a full scale war but he was trapped. Nixon meddled, telling North Vietnam he would give them a better deal. Nixon ran his campaign on ending the war then kept us there until 1975. Nixon also spent more money on the war in Vietnam.
Vaush talks about fashion like he read a big book called "The Rules of Fashion" and now he's going around to people listing off all of the rules they're breaking.
The Dunning Kruger effect in action. Maybe at one point he'll learn enough about fashion to not come off like a Philosophy 101 student who just discovered Nietzche.
@@sactathat's his giimmick tho
Vaush's date night outfit was fire AF, unironically giving green flags, taking this dude home vibe. Who knew my hind brain could be hijacked by high waisted pants.
It's not just branding, Pool puts so much stock into him being perceived as a 2005 cool skater dude. He spent millions on a personal skate park, of course he'll wear a beanie at Mar-a-Lago.
If you don't want to shake someone's hand and you know it's coming, PICK YOUR NOSE, then when they reach out their hand tell them you just picked your nose and haven't washed your hand yet. They'll appreciate and respect your honestly, won't want to shake your hand, and might even laugh. Make sure to wash your hands immediately after.
For anyone wondering: all suits have one extra button, it's so that if the used button(s) fall off, you can use the bottom one to find a replacement. You aren't taking the bottom button and moving up, rather they're identical so it lets you know the exact size, shape, and colour you need.
That's also why you aren't supposed to button this extra button - so that you don't risk *it* falling off so you lose your reference point. If it falls off on its own, that's what the extra button hole is for (to check size and height) and since you haven't used it there's no risk of it being stretched.
Three-button suits go by the 'sometimes, always, never' rule. Double breasted suits have the spare on the chest. Et cetera.
i only learned this the first time I wore formal wear at 30, but i googled it. the rule is, from bottom up, *never, always, sometimes.* never button the bottom, if there are more than two, consider both clasped and unclasped for the topmost depending on aesthetic. the second button up is always designed to look best clasped.
his beanie is like his logo, he has to wear it, its like his Sonichu medallion.
Unironically a great segment 👏
Tim pools beanie is like Jotaro’s hat, they’re one in the same 😂
Angry upvote because it's accurate but Tim doesn't deserve to be mentioned in the same breath as jotaro
@@rishabhanand4973
Totally fair 😂
Is there a Vaush Fashion playlist yet?
I didn’t think I’d be hearing Lyndon B Johnson saying the word bunghole today, but man I’m glad I did.
The point of a firm handshake isn't to squeeze the other person into submission. The point is to squeeze just tight enough to assert your presence while making it clear that you both could squeeze tighter but also choose not to squeeze tighter out of mutual respect for the other party's presence. Make yourself known while making it mutually understood the other party is also known.
Takes like 2 sec to google so take this with a grain of salt:
1. Both buttons were done up prior to Edward VII due to most jackets being riding jackets. Edward popularized the suit jacket and only did up the top button so it was easier to mount and ride.
2. These days it is entirely aesthetic, though having only the top button does give you slightly more mobility.
3. There is at least 1 reddit user that suggests that the bottom button is only for maintaining the suit shape while hanging.
To be fair, Vaush is looking very good. He lost a lot of weight!
Came for the roast of Tim Pool, stayed for the fashion lecture
I was WAITING for Vaush to speak up about this!
Lmao after watching the Majority Report segment I knew you would be covering it
Since I never had a suit before, it's good info to know to never button the bottom button.
The reason to not button the lower one is because king Edward VII was fat so he left it unbuttoned, then everyone else did the same out of respect. Vaush being a monarchist unintentionally due to being a slave to fashion is funny. The focus on the button and not the damn beanie is the worst Vaush fashion take so far.
If I'm ever forced to get a tailored suit it'll be designed for both buttons to be used just so I can annoy people.
This is a real historical style called a paddock coat. It wouldn't really annoy anyone bc the button placement would be different, it's essentially a true three-button jacket without a bottom button
A good suit allows you to button the lapel shut for cold weather.
I hate how much of my brain is devoted to men's fashion. I am a trans woman and started wearing suits on a somewhat regular basis at 12, which continued until I was 20.
In the last seven years I have worn a suit one time, and it was a men's suit I bought for my friend's wedding and had altered to fit my proportions. Pantsuits are almost all completely hideous and it simply DOESN'T have to be this way. At this point I'm thinking about just buying a cricut and a sewing machine and making suits for women that blend a feminine fit with the fine conventions practiced by habadashers.
imagine wanting to have your picture taken with Roger Stone...
The bottom button always stays undone, but if it's a three button suit you're supposed to button the top two
He’s right about high waisted pants
"Like ridin' a whare fence."
I was waiting for Vaush’s sartorial notes on this one.
No one would recognize him without the beanie
Vaush's chat when he improves himself: "what, do you think you're better than me?"
Fist bump is the new handshake
I refuse to shake hands with other men at this point because every time, without fail, they think "firm handshake" means crush the other guy's hand.
The beanie isn’t just a branding thing, it’s his baldness cope shield!
I learned not to button the bottom button when my dad was handing me the keys to his car for prom
And the suit was from Khol's, close enough to Macey's lol. I still have it but its discolored
Damn Vaush, looking svelte. Congratulations. What were you doing, what changes did you make to get into shape.
There are some blazers that work well with having both buttons done up. I remember my school uniform blazer worked well with both buttons done up.
I wonder if that's what makes it a blazer?
22:20 - It's "Kummerbund", not "Cumberbund". There is only a "b" in the second half of the word ;)
Koomerbund?
@@HarryDirtayKoomer Bund
I was never taught how to tie a tie, now I’m trans. Fathers, raise your boys right or they will be one of the girlies wearing cat ears being cringe online.
i've never been taught how to tie a tie and i just bought my first pair of thigh highs this month
@@comyuse9103 welcome sister
My dad taught me how to tie a tie when I was young and I ended up trans anyways, so if it's not the ties it has to be something else entirely.
3:09 I was never told to not button the bottom button on a two button suit growing up, no one told me any kind of suit etiquette, I just kinda got some and people had me wear them and button them all up
I work in tech and can count on 1 hand how many handshakes ive had to give lol. But that kind of checks out
Dim Stool is wearing a 3 roll 2, not 2 button, that said the bottom button rule always applies.
Some vintage suits from before the 1930s were cut to be worn with both buttons fastened.
The date outfit was top tier.
As soon as I saw this picture I knew Vaush would have a segment on it.
You don’t button the bottom button. The origin of the tradition is interesting but not important.
The most important reason today is that modern suits, unless you specifically tailor them, are not made for it to be used. As Vaush mention. However it is worth mentioning that suits that are made for all buttons to be used exists. But they are an extreme rarity and cannot be bought off the rack or be fitted at a tailor from an existing suit.
💋
LBJ: “ah, ya got me!”
😂
In terms of buttons the saying goes from top to bottom “Sometimes, Always, Never”.
Tim Pool dropped out of school at 14 and so could not learn it in middle school.
Great fashion segment, also you looked really good in that date fit.
If you are sitting, or about to put your hand in your pockets the bottom button should be unbuttoned. Hell, id say if sitting have the jacket open if possible.
If posing for a picture, i feel like i dont mind buttons done, only of hands arent in the dang pockets like every picture tim has done.
Roger Crypt Keeper Stone has his hands in his pockets to hold his pants up.
The Beanie is the Real Tim Pool. The "Tim Pool" with the face we see, is just a meat puppet The Beanie uses to move around and manipulate its environment.
I still can't figure out how people breathe in high rise pants except for the ones that are all the way up by the solar plexus
I'm a tailor for 35 yrs and people's needs have changed over that time so bottom buttons come n go which n is fine if you are a thinker and look to see how it looks
Maybe it was being raised a church boy, but this is insane to me. No bottom button is literally rule number 1.
I don't wear suits that often, and I know these fundamentals.
I never knew the button rule because I get my suits from the thrift store lol
Heartbreaking. Vaush finally had a correct fashion take. Reconsidering everything I thought I knew about suits on principle
The second button on the suit is a knowledge check that’s the only reason it exists
Button rule explained more brieflierly: dead rich guy got fat
Aside: Some of my clothes came with the spare button sewn in rather than on the tag, Considering the one button rule and the cuffs, my sport jacket has 7.
I was literally taught this by the lady that sold me my first and only sports jacket
Thought the beanie hid his second mouth.
Tim Pool is so unintentionally funny. Talks civil war and masculinity and dresses like this.