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i shop/used to shop at like A&F Hollister etc... i go to some other places now can i get your opinions?

i still shop at like AE Hollister A&F, but ive been shopping at Express, PacSun, Heritage 1981 Urban Behavior.. has a different, and cool look. i still like some of the stuff at the "preppy" places. ive never worn any of the clothes that just have the name of the company on it, i like the shirts that have the different pics or designs on it

im 20, so girls what do you think looks good on a guy? i like whatever i guess as long as it just doesn't have the name of the company on it, its like free advertising to me lol... i like when girls think i look good when i go out lol

Well I think Express Men is the sexiest. =)


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Classic Clothing Styles That are Always in Fashion

Here are just a few historic examples of the evolution of style and the progress of fashion.

Thomas Burberry opened his own business in 1856 in Basingstoake, Hampshire. His commitment to both form and function in apparel design has been significant throughout the development of the company and its products. Noticing how local shepherds and farmers wore linen smocks, which were cool in summer and warm in the winter, he attempted to apply the same principles to other clothing.

The English Madder silk ties is recognised worldwide as an icon of British style. It’s a home grown classic with a proud heritage and a distinct provenance. The “madder” part of this lovely phrase refers to a natural dye from a Eurasian herbaceous plant, Rubia tinctoria.

Its continuing success through decades of rise and fall owe much too scientific intervention. The colouring agent in madder root called alizarin was in fact first chemically extracted and then synthesized in 1869 by two English chemists. Although the dyeing process, even today, requires a variety of painstaking steps, synthesized alizarin brought the price within the reach of commercial producers. Testimony to the significant part science plays ensuring the longevity of styles and textiles. Silk dyed in this manner is characterized by a dusty-looking finish and a feel (referred to as a chalk hand by the experts) very much like fine suede, and a matte finish.

Brummell rejected 18th century frills (dandy man). His mandate, a dark blue coat, buff-coloured pantaloons and waistcoat, black boots and a clean white neck cloth, survives today as the dark business suit, white shirt and silk tie

He was particularly adamant about the whiteness of his cravats. As he made his daily rounds from the park, various gentleman's clubs and fashionable homes, Brummell would stop and change his cravat as often as three times a day. He preferred neck cloths that were lightly starched and carefully folded.

And now to the origination of most enduring fashion accessories for men: In 1880, the rowing club at Oxford Universities Exeter College, invented the first school ties. After an emotional win over their rivals, they celebrated by removing their ribbon hat bands from their boater hats and tying them, four in hand around their necks. When they ordered a set of ties, with the colours from their hatbands, they had accidentally created the modern school tie. Schools, clubs, and athletic ties appeared in abundance. Some schools had different ties for various grades, levels of achievement, and for graduates. Thanks to historians and their method of accurate documentation all the original college colours are still available from archived samples and replicate ties can be made to order.

But let’s not forget the perfect companion for your tie? cufflinks of course.

Just a hint of how styles evolved and fashion has progressed throughout the ages.

About the Author

Purveyor of finely crafted men’s fashion accessories by Timothy Everest, including, Timothy’s Savile Row collection of Silk Ties