Great eye for good outfits; thanks for the ideas. The pants fit stands out, so many retail stores sell mainly low-rise trousers that are uncomfortable and don't look or fit well.
Almost all of my jeans are from B&Tailor's RTW collection. The model I'm wearing is from a few seasons ago, but the updated one is New Largo: www.chadprom.com/product/list.html?cate_no=70
the thing with these outfits for me is: they look really nice, but when it's humid and 37 °C out, there is no way that these would be anywhere near cool enough. I know one would need to choose the right fabrics, but still... two layers of the thinest wool, linen, or cotton is still way to much for me on a hot and humid summer day.
then dont wear it on 37 c days. But no, two layers of the thinist linnen will absultely be good. if a cotton shirt on its own works, linen on linen will too, cause it is way more breathable inherently. So at most, it should feel similar to a typical cotton tshirt everyone wears in the summer. Plus, its the direct sun rays on your skin that warms you up the most. being covered acutally helps you stay cool for much longer. Same reason you wouldn't catch people living in the desert of egypt wearing short clothing. if anything, they too are layered a lot to protect themselves.
Honestly, ditch the jacket. My hometown would get 40 c humid summers. Play around with different types of shirts. Skip the denim. I like chino pants and chino shorts during the summer. Choose looser fits and untucked cuts for extra ventaliation. I get it. No matter how thin the linen, layering can be killer in some areas.
The jackets, trousers and polos are from www.principlem.com, the jeans are from Chad Prom (www.bntailor.com). If there are some specific items you are curious about, let me know.
Sweat is almost inevitable, thats why your under-garment (polo, shirt, etc.) should be easy to take care of and launder since it will be what absorbs the sweat. Go with cotton/linen shirts or crochet woven polos for breathability and sweat wicking. If you are outdoors and you will have to walk a few blocks and might sweat, take of the jacket and throw it over the shoulder (this looks stylish btw) so you can give the undergarment the chance to wick sweat away from your body and dry with some air contact. Once back indoors into temperature controlled environment, throw the jacket back on. As for the jacket and wool trousers, get something in a high twist breathable wool at around 250 grams. This kind of wool will have more ventilation than a cotton or linen, believe it or not. Check out my other video on wools if you want to learn more about that: th-cam.com/video/ql42vZB5v4k/w-d-xo.html
Like all the color combinations here. Liking the beige jacket, black shirt combo. Looks good anytime of year.
I'm glad you're liking the looks, beige jacket and black shirt combo is great, and it's a pretty timeless pairing.
Great eye for good outfits; thanks for the ideas. The pants fit stands out, so many retail stores sell mainly low-rise trousers that are uncomfortable and don't look or fit well.
So true!
@@Justin_Kwan seems the trousers aren't cut for men, bur for skinny kids or teenagers Why are they selling those, to save on fabric?
Those jeans at 2:00 look great, where did you get them /what model are they?
Any sources for high rise jeans in general that you'd suggest?
Almost all of my jeans are from B&Tailor's RTW collection. The model I'm wearing is from a few seasons ago, but the updated one is New Largo: www.chadprom.com/product/list.html?cate_no=70
the thing with these outfits for me is: they look really nice, but when it's humid and 37 °C out, there is no way that these would be anywhere near cool enough. I know one would need to choose the right fabrics, but still... two layers of the thinest wool, linen, or cotton is still way to much for me on a hot and humid summer day.
maybe a t-shirt with a pair of linen shorts/trousers and sandals or espadrilles.
then dont wear it on 37 c days. But no, two layers of the thinist linnen will absultely be good. if a cotton shirt on its own works, linen on linen will too, cause it is way more breathable inherently. So at most, it should feel similar to a typical cotton tshirt everyone wears in the summer. Plus, its the direct sun rays on your skin that warms you up the most. being covered acutally helps you stay cool for much longer.
Same reason you wouldn't catch people living in the desert of egypt wearing short clothing. if anything, they too are layered a lot to protect themselves.
Honestly, ditch the jacket. My hometown would get 40 c humid summers. Play around with different types of shirts. Skip the denim. I like chino pants and chino shorts during the summer. Choose looser fits and untucked cuts for extra ventaliation.
I get it. No matter how thin the linen, layering can be killer in some areas.
Very nice. Brands and prices of the outfits would have been helpful
The jackets, trousers and polos are from www.principlem.com, the jeans are from Chad Prom (www.bntailor.com). If there are some specific items you are curious about, let me know.
Any tips for people who get sweaty? Would love to dress like this but I don’t want to ruin nice clothes by sweating in them all day
Sweat is almost inevitable, thats why your under-garment (polo, shirt, etc.) should be easy to take care of and launder since it will be what absorbs the sweat. Go with cotton/linen shirts or crochet woven polos for breathability and sweat wicking. If you are outdoors and you will have to walk a few blocks and might sweat, take of the jacket and throw it over the shoulder (this looks stylish btw) so you can give the undergarment the chance to wick sweat away from your body and dry with some air contact. Once back indoors into temperature controlled environment, throw the jacket back on. As for the jacket and wool trousers, get something in a high twist breathable wool at around 250 grams. This kind of wool will have more ventilation than a cotton or linen, believe it or not. Check out my other video on wools if you want to learn more about that: th-cam.com/video/ql42vZB5v4k/w-d-xo.html
What about an ascot / cravat to add a bit more color. They used to be a casual alternative to the tie.
I'd just take a silk scarf at that point.
That would be a nice item to add a bit of color and tie together an outfit.
how tall is this man, he looks so smooth
ha, thanks!
First 😁
je tu suiver toujour tu es tres elegant
merci!