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New trouser day!!
Just received these last night from my tailor! Tan dress trousers with a slight break and cuffs (Turn ups). They are still a bit loose but will have them taken in again throughout the weight loss OOTD: Cream/Brown/Blue window pane button down Tan Dress Trousers OTC dress socks Tobacco suede tassel loafers. Hope you all have a great Wednesday!!
New trouser day!!
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Wednesday OOtD
Headed home from El Paso. A few meetings on the way home. - white and blue windowpane button up - Brown leather belt - Khaki slim fit chinos - Brown lace up boots - Bulova Marine Star watch
Wednesday OOtD
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This Stops Being About Clothes
There's a shift that happens for some men. They stop asking "does this look okay?" and start knowing. Not because they memorized rules — but because they've built a standard for themselves. A quiet confidence that doesn't need to announce itself. You see it in how they walk into a room. In how people respond to them before they say a word. In how much mental energy they have left for things that actually matter. That's not style. That's identity. And identity isn't bought — it's built, through consistent habits and deliberate choices made over time. That's what RMRS Premium is designed for. Not trends. Not outfit grids. A structured path to becoming the man who looks sharp because of who he is — not what he's wearing. If that shift sounds like something you want, the door's open: https://www.skool.com/rmrs/plans
This Stops Being About Clothes
Apparently This is a “Thing?”
I know some folks on here have a strong opinion about Crocks. I don’t own any, by the way, and I never paid them any attention until they were discussed in this community. So my question is, are designer Crocks really a thing? I saw these on a lady today. Up until now, I thought Crocks in Mossy Oak camo were the epitome of injection molded footwear!
Apparently This is a “Thing?”
My Favorite Costume Hats...
Given the reactions to my previous post on a related topic, I thought I'd make today's post about my personal, favorite costume hats that I wear from time to time. I have two Stetson Temple Fedoras - modeled after the hats Stetson created for Harrison Ford in the film Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. Designed to evoke the feeling of a classic 1930s to 1940s daily-wear hat a university professor might have worn - while perhaps not being entirely historically accurate - this hat provides both the versatility of any, classic Fedora while adding in the "cool" factor of literally being modeled after and named for the hat worn in the iconic film and the film itself. Of course, despite the fact that this particular model was literally created to be a costume piece, the Temple Fedora isn't my most costume-y hat. That distinction belongs to the next featured hat model: the Trilby. The story of the Trilby starts in Theatre Royal Haymarket - in Westminster, London - in 1894. That year, the stage adaptation of George du Maurier's novel Trilby debuted. The actress, who played the titular character, wore a custom-made hat made specifically for the character: an extremely stingily brimmed Fedora with a short, creased crown and that distinctive narrow brim that turns up sharply in the back and down just as sharply in the front. London women quickly flocked to this particular style of hat and, shortly after - in the early 1900s, so did the London men. Then - as now - the style was simply known as "The Trilby." In modern times, of course, as the popularity of brimmed hats has waned, so has the knowledge of brimmed hat styles. You will often see various styles of stingy-brimmed Fedoras marketed as Trilbys, even if they have a teardrop rather than a creased crown. Still, you'll still - most often, at least - have a very stingy brim and that sharp upturn in the back. In fact, you'll notice that my two examples of the Trilby each have a technical problem with being called a Trilby. The first (the Carmel by American Hat Makers) has a teardrop crown instead of a creased one. However, the classic stiff turns and stinginess of the brim make up, in my mind, for that small mistake. Likewise, the fourth - a navy houndstooth by Cremieux - features a stingy snap brim, meaning it's technically not a Trilby as it can be worn without the downturn up front. However, since that's the only way I wear it, I've decided to allow it.
My Favorite Costume Hats...
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