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LIVE Niche Fragrance Collector is happening in 14 days
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Checked Shirt: Pass?
I wore a long unused checked shirt for shopping with my wife today. The checks are a mash up between window pane and Tattersall (I think). Brown belt, Tiger Eye bracelet, tan-strap watch, and tan neubuck loafers complete the attire. So far, I only had imagined jeans to suit the shirt. Now, I think my khakhi/bronze chinos do as good a job (or may be a better one). I am imagining burgundy chinos would be ideal (I am not planning on buying one, just thinking theoretically as the majority hue in the checks is burgundy). May be, I can try this with my ivory Chinos as the checks also have whites in between. May be this shirt is more versatile than I thought (in my past life). What do you think folks?
Checked Shirt: Pass?
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Buntyn’s Tie Challenge Day 14
Day 2 of the Carhartt’s today and I’m going with this Pierre Cardin Tie I found last weekend. I like it’s geometric patterns and the light color matches the trousers pretty well. White shirt and socks underneath, and on top is a classic Navy Blazer. Black Belt and Loafers. Tommy showed up for the Outtake. Say Hi 👋 to Tommy.
Buntyn’s Tie Challenge Day 14
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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
From Worn to Worthy: Restoring Heritage Footwear with Patina, Precision, and Purpose
For me, shoe restoration has never been about simply making an old pair look presentable again. It is about preserving craftsmanship from an era when shoes were built with integrity, recraftability, and character. In a world increasingly driven by disposable fashion, I’ve developed a deep appreciation for restoring legacy footwear — shoes that still possess exceptional leather quality, strong structural foundations, and the unmistakable soul that only time and wear can create. Much of my work has centered around heritage American and European footwear, including vintage Allen Edmonds wingtips, bicycle toes, and custom patina projects, along with refined European styles from Mezlan, including woven oxfords and other classic dress silhouettes. Many of these pairs arrived heavily neglected: dried and oxidized uppers, uneven factory finishes, deep creasing, dulled welts, faded color transitions, and years of embedded contamination that muted the natural beauty of the leather. Beneath all of that wear, though, there was still life in the shoes — and that is what I’m always trying to uncover. My restoration process begins with deep leather cleaning and decontamination using saddle soap, leather cleansers, and controlled stripping agents such as acetone or professional deglazers to remove failing finishes, wax buildup, silicones, and surface contaminants. I approach this carefully because the goal is never to aggressively strip the leather, but to reveal its natural character while preserving its integrity. Once stripped, the leather is slowly rehydrated and nourished using products such as Saphir Renovateur, Venetian Shoe Cream, and penetrating conditioners designed to restore flexibility, richness, and depth back into tired calfskin. I allow the leather time to absorb and stabilize before moving into color work. Leather responds best when it’s treated patiently. The artistic process begins with custom patina development. Rather than applying flat, uniform color, I build depth through layered dye applications using alcohol-based dyes, creams, and tonal blending techniques that create movement and transparency across the upper. My work consistently gravitates toward rich cognacs, museum browns, tobacco undertones, espresso burnishing, and antiqued transitions that give the shoes an old-world European character without looking artificial or overdone.
From Worn to Worthy: Restoring Heritage Footwear with Patina, Precision, and Purpose
Wedding Rehearsal
I skipped the blazer for the evening, but threw it on just for the pictures when I got home. Haven't posted in while. But I liked this one and thought yall would too. Hickey Freeman blue blazer David Donahue FC dress shirt (gift from a dear friend and brother of mine) Wrangler khaki jeans & socks Buckley belt Allen Edmonds penny loafers Stetson Temple fedora MF Honor fragrance Monterey "Kitty Hawk" mechanical pilot watch
Wedding Rehearsal
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