High fashion: 17th century style |
A few days ago I saw a woman walking downtown wearing yoga
pants and Crocs. That’s not unusual, but it was pretty obvious that this person
has never assumed the Lotus position and wasn’t on her way to do some
gardening.
There’s often a big gap between “fashion” and what’s merely
“fashionable.” I marvel over the basic contradiction in North American society
between individualism and the desire to look like everyone else. Do fashion and
commonsense even know each other?
It’s not like this is new. Check out pix of Baroque era men
mincing about in powdered wigs, dotting their pancaked faces with fake moles, tottering
in their architectural shoes, and wearing garish clothing that made them look
like mutant tropical birds. (See above) Watch some old movies where all the men wore hats,
ties, and worsted wool suits–even in summer. (Remarkably they never seemed to
sweat.)
Full confession: I too have sinned. In the late 1960s I grew
my hair long, wore a bandana headband, had several blousy flowered shirts, strings
of love beads, and bell-bottoms so wide my legs disappeared. I also had a
fringed leather vest and moccasins, but envied my buddy Mike who had an entire
fringed ensemble. Whenever Mike moved, he was out of focus. If he had but carried a long rifle, he
could have been Buffalo Bill’s body double. In the ‘70s I briefly had a
particularly ugly pair of 3-inch stack-heeled shoes. Hey, when you’re only 5’5”
those babies almost made me reach for an oxygen tank. Later on I owned a
polyester leisure suit and I’m not proud about that.
Let’s not let our Canadian friends off the hook. In the
1980s I spent time in Montreal, where I observed that all the women were
supposed to dress like they just walked off a Paris runway, whilst the men looked
as if they just waded out of a Paramus swamp. When I visited last summer, the
women still looked overdressed, but the men upgraded to looking like French
existentialists too bored to notice their attire.
Cue current wicked dumb fashion:
1. Crocs are today’s
jellies.
Remember “jellies,” those molded plastic shoes lots of young
women wore until they collectively said, “Damn! These are really uncomfortable,
unspeakably dumb-looking, and make my feet smell like I bathed in raw sewage?”
Crocs are just like that, only uglier.
2. Ripped jeans and
rip-offs.
When I was a kid my mother patched the holes of my ripped
jeans. She used old denim if available; if not, any material she had, as if the
humiliation of the makeshift patches were intended to warn me not to tear them
again. She would have grounded me had I asked to spend $100 on jeans that look
as if weasels shredded them. She had a word for such garments: rags.
Ladies: When buying a handbag or a pair of nosebleed heels,
never spend a sum that is greater than your college debt.
3. Tattoos
Yeah, I know scarification is an old art form. It used to
be, though, that mostly Maori, U.S. Navy veterans, and sideshow freaks had
tats. Now scores of people you barely know will brazenly pull up their shirts
or push down their trou to display their ink. Ironically, much of it is on
parts of their bodies they can’t even see.
4. Boxer shorts
underwear.
I guess that’s because you just never know when you’ll be
called upon to spar a few rounds.
5. Mullet dresses.
Can we just agree that any and all forms of the mullet are a
really bad idea–even for a tooth-challenged hockey player?
6. Shorts that aren’t
and other spatial distortions.
Ummm… aren’t long shorts an oxymoron? Is the point of them
to make it appear as if your waist is connected directly to your ankles? A
female corollary would be Uggs and short skirts. One's hemline should always be
longer than the height of the footwear.
7. Twenty going on
fifty fashions.
What’s up with gear like nerd glasses, pork pie hats,
nouveau poodle skirts, retro mod, the calico renaissance, the return of
Butterick patterns, and patterned shirts so ugly a drunken Scotsman wouldn’t
wear them? To my young friends in your 20s: You really don’t want to hasten the process of what you’ll look like
when you’re 50!
8. Rhinestone
cowboys.
If you’ve never ridden the range or been closer to a cow
than a milk carton, don’t wear cowboy hats or boots.
9. Geographically
inappropriate clothing.
An acrylic sweater in New England is like a bikini in
Greenland. If you wear pastels up this way, though, people will want to know
why you look a Florida verandah. The flip side is that no one south of the
Mason-Dixon needs a pair of Bean boots. Other geographic misfits include white
suburbanites dressing like Mexican campesinos,
Andean llama herders, or Jamaican Rastafarians. Don’t get me started on cos-play.
10. Of
yoga and sweat pants.
I get it that people are often in a hurry, so I’ll overlook
the occasional transgression, but I still say you shouldn’t wear athletic wear
unless you actually take yoga classes or work out.
Is this the part where I ask you why you’re considering
sartorial advice from a guy who now thinks high fashion is a clean t-shirt?
Rob Weir
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