Showing posts with label Fold shirt and suits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fold shirt and suits. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

The Best Sneakers to Wear with Suits


The keys to pulling off the suit + sneakers look:
  1. The fit of the suit is everything, especially the trousers which should tapered with little-to-no break
  2. The suit needs to be unstructured. Shoulder pads with sneakers will have you looking like Jerry Seinfeld.
  3. The fabric should be textured and seasonal. This gives the suit an appropriate, leisurely, non-corporate vibe.
  4. The right sneakers, or course. Think low-top, no-frills, classics.
We tapped downtown NYC legend, and former backcourt mate, Niko Scott to show us a few kicks that are designed to be well-suited. 

Lanvin Captoe Trainers

The quality of the sneaker goes a long way in keeping up with a good suit.

Vans Authentic Low

If you’re planning to sharpen-up a pair Vans, make it a pair in a unique fabric that is slightly more luxe than the traditional cotton canvas – like these genuine suede versions, for example.

Common Projects Achilles

Readers often ask if Common Projects are worth the $400 price tag. As anyone who has owned a pair will tell you, yes, they are. There’s something about the leather and construction of these – they last incredibly well and actually build a patina over time, similar to pair of benchmade lace-ups.
This pair is more than four years old and have been worn through the worst of NYC winters. The “serial number” is completely rubbed off, but they are still kicking – a fresh shine would probably go a long way as well.

Adidas Stan Smiths

If the $400 price tag is too steep, you really can’t go wrong with low-top classics in all white, like Stan Smiths.
Scoring a rare release (like these “whole-cut unstructured” versions) will elevate the selection for the sneaker connoisseurs, too.

 

Thank you for reading.




Credit: Dan & Niko

How to Fold a Suit & Shirt in a Suitcase

Here's a quick guide on how to fold a suit and shirt to avoid wrinkling in your suitcase.

The Suit

First, lay the jacket flat:
The key is that all four panels are laying perfectly flat (front and back, including the vents). The pin is optional (I wouldn’t use it on cottons or fragile fabrics):
Flip the perfectly-flat jacket over:
Fold the side of the jacket, lined-up with the center back seam:
Flatten and smoothen the sleeve along the fold line:



 Repeat on the other side:

Now to the trousers. Fold them in half, keeping the front crease in tact by inverting the front waistband (fly open):
One more fold to get the trousers into quarters:
Place the trousers on the top half of the jacket, waistband along the sleeve edge:
Fold the jacket in half over the trousers:
Flip it over. Boom.

The Shirt

Fully button the shirt and lay it on its front. Fold the right sleeve straight back at the shoulder:
Fold the sleeve upward over the center of the collar:
Fold the cuff (buttoned) downward:
Repeat with the left sleeve, on top of the right:
Fold the right side of the shirt over the folded sleeves, creating a straight fold roughly one inch from the edge of the collar:
Repeat with the left side over the right side:
Fold the bottom third of the shirt upward:
Fold one more time from where the hem landed. The first folded edge should land just below the collar:
Flip it over. Boom.

Finally, to really avoid wrinkling, place the garments in extra-large ziplock bags and seal them with a little air so that the garments do not get squashed by other items in your suitcase (the pressure creates wrinkles). For a video tutorial check out this guy – he really gets it.
Another trick to avoid being a wrinkled mess while traveling is removing all of the garments from your suitcase and hanging them on proper hangers ASAP upon arrival. If needed, most hotels have irons, too. If not, you could always get away with the old shower steamer trick.
Thanks for reading and safe travels!


Credit: Dan Trepanier