View Full Version : clothing question
mendyweiss
09-27-2007, 08:43 AM
When did we go from this ?http://www.staleywise.com/collection/steichen/steichen_gary_cooper_b.jpg
to this ?http://www.flavazinc.com/image/19401604.jpeg
Furtherman
09-27-2007, 08:44 AM
Stop it. We haven't. Still plenty of suits out there.
Keotok
09-27-2007, 08:53 AM
Your right, fashion should never change....Damn those kids!
http://www.medievaldesign.com/farsetti/1500outfit.jpghttp://cache.eb.com/eb/image?id=66323&rendTypeId=4
http://www.clicket.com/images/13-154.jpghttp://www.coonce-ewing.com/images/1863.jpg
ChrisTheCop
09-27-2007, 08:59 AM
When did we go from this ?http://www.staleywise.com/collection/steichen/steichen_gary_cooper_b.jpg
to this ?http://www.flavazinc.com/image/19401604.jpeg
People who know me know... nothing's changed for me.
I think I have that same exact suit.
http://www.coonce-ewing.com/images/1863.jpg
This is what El Mudo wears for "casual Friday".
mendyweiss
09-27-2007, 09:09 AM
This is what El Mudo wears for "casual Friday".
now that's funny !!
Crispy123
09-27-2007, 09:27 AM
http://library.thinkquest.org/C0123260/basic%20knowledge/images/basic%20knowledge/genes/MENDEL's%20experiment.gif
Chip Vaughn
09-27-2007, 11:35 AM
I think you are taught what to wear by parents and people you respect. Some people like the way Matt Lauer dresses and some people like the way 50 cents dresses. Sure we all go through a period of rebelling and disrespect, but in the end we dress how we were raised and/or how we wish to carry ourselves. Personally I am a farmer (literally), but I really enjoy donning a nice suit for a dinner, church, a wedding, etc... My grandpa always wore cuff-links and it is an obsession I still have. I also taught myself to tie a tie three different ways, and wear a bowtie on occasion.
drjoek
09-27-2007, 11:48 AM
Swiss guards in the Vatican, Rome
The Swiss Guards give a touch of color to St. Peter's Square: in their Renaissance costumes, with puffed sleeves and knicker-bockers striped red, blue and yellow, they stand on either side of the basilica, guarding the gates into Vatican City.
When the company was founded, in 1505, the soldiers wore simple tunics, but in 1548 the present uniforms were adopted. A long-standing tradition holds that they were designed by Michelangelo, but there is no foundation for this belief. As well as their everyday costumes, the Swiss Guards have suits of armor, with swords weighing thirty kilos, but these are used only for escorting the Pope during special ceremonies in St. Peter's.
http://z.about.com/d/german/1/0/U/b/1/SwissGrd250.jpg
Some dress is timeless
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