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When a man's got to look mature

3-MIN READ3-MIN
SCMP Reporter

There is a general consensus this season that men's fashion is looking more grown-up. There is an emphasis on being more polished and sophisticated, like the leading men during Hollywood's golden years - Humphrey Bogart, Cary Grant, Gregory Peck, Montgomery Clift. This season is all about looking like a man who knows the ways of the world. A man who can pull off a three-piece suit. A man who knows how to work a classic fedora. It is less about trying to hang on to the coat-tails of youth and more about accepting maturity when it comes.

This sartorial shift can be attributed to a number of things. One is fashion's rejection of all things skinny and androgynous, which have been major trends for several years. Fashion's nature is cyclical, it swings from trend to trend, exhausting all possible permutations of a style then going for its polar opposite. It has done so with the skinny, boyish silhouette. Now it is swinging towards clothes that have, for lack of a better word, heft. They always say that clothes make the man; if this were true, then to be a proper man one must dress the part.

Other factors that have led to this new mood in fashion are shows such as Mad Men and White Collar, in which the characters are always dapper in their well-tailored suits and crisp white shirts. Even Chuck Bass, a popular character on the show Gossip Girl, has been making a play at looking like a grown-up despite being barely of legal age.

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Television has pointed its cameras at men who would rather sport a navy jacket (HK$29,900) with cream trousers (HK$3,900) from Ermenegildo Zegna (1) or a relaxed casual linen sports jacket with patch pockets (HK$6,900) from Ring Jacket (2) at The Armoury or a Panama hat from Borsalino rather than on the teenagers it was fixated on a few years ago. You know the type. The Ashton Kutcher trucker-hat-and-slogan-T-shirt-wearing clones. Even Justin Bieber, the current poster child for all things pubescent, has made an effort to wear suits at events such as the Golden Globes and Grammys. Whether he looked like he was playing dress up or he was dressed as a ring bearer for a wedding is beside the point. He deserved an A for effort.

And of course there is the Tom Ford ripple effect. Ever since he launched his eponymous men's line, which is all about classic tailoring - double-breasted suits, strong shoulders, waistcoats - he has influenced many of his peers, which ultimately led to this current mature and classic dressing mood.

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This is evident in the clothes available at The Swank, from the linen sports jacket with generous lapels from Corneliani to the double-breasted seersucker suits from Isaia. You can see these are the clothes that a man would want to wear now, because they are classic pieces that will never go out of style. And this is the beauty of classic dressing, longevity, an important factor especially when you are shelling out several thousands of dollars for a suit jacket or the perfect trousers.

Ralph Lauren's Purple Label is all about looking like a man of the world. It is a collection filled with three-piece suits with strong, dependable shoulders, shirts in bold stripes, handsome cufflinks and tie bars, and well-polished monk strap shoes. But my favourite look is that of the micro-houndstooth cardigan with a navy border paired with a starched white shirt, a navy and white tie, and well-cut navy trousers finished with dark monogram slippers (3). It has all the hallmarks of classic elegance, of cocktails in wood panelled libraries in huge mansions in Newport, of a time when everyone dressed for dinner.

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