oh, larissa


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From the Ben Sherman summer 2010 collection. Love the tailoring and use of texture.

From the Ben Sherman summer 2010 collection. Love the tailoring and use of texture.



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It has been awhile since I last posted about menswear.  Here is Adrian Bosch with the SS10 collection from COS (part of the Hennes & Mauritz family).  Totally wearable and open for personalization.

It has been awhile since I last posted about menswear.  Here is Adrian Bosch with the SS10 collection from COS (part of the Hennes & Mauritz family).  Totally wearable and open for personalization.



Link

NYT: This Just in From the 1890s

“IT’S usually easy to distinguish between clothes and costumes: either you’re Spider-Man, or you’re not.

Drawing the line between polish and pretension is trickier, especially when last year’s costume can be this year’s classic, and next year’s yawn. Just consider the steady infiltration of 19th-century haberdashery into the 21st-century wardrobe. Garment after garment has arrived on the scene that one might think more Gilbert and Sullivan than Bergdorf and Goodman, only to be taken up by the young beards.

Not long ago, big brass-buttoned military coats looked a bit extreme. So did high-button, high-lapel vests and slim tweed trousers. And so did guys who tucked said trousers into high, old-fashioned hunting boots. Now these clothes (along with those ever-present beards and mustaches) look like downtown defaults compared with fall runway looks like cardinal-red tailcoats at Ralph Lauren, capes and bowlers at Alexander McQueen and knee breeches at Robert Geller.

As with home design, where curio cases, taxidermy and other stylish clutter of the Victorian era have been taken up by young hipsters, many of today’s popular men’s styles have their roots in the late 19th century. There are the three-piece suits once favored by mustachioed Gilded Age bankers; the military greatcoats and boots of Union officers; and the henley undershirts, suspenders, plaid flannel shirts and stout drill trousers worn by plain, honest farmers…

“We’ve already seen the comeback of the butcher and the baker,” he said. “Next thing is going to be a hipster candlestick maker.””



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I love the asymmetrical Rick Owens men’s leather jacket. (via)

I love the asymmetrical Rick Owens men’s leather jacket. (via)



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I really like the contrast here.

I really like the contrast here.



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Adorable editorial with Douglas Neitzke for Popeye magazine as photographed by Junji Hata. I love the shout-out to The Economist!

Adorable editorial with Douglas Neitzke for Popeye magazine as photographed by Junji Hata. I love the shout-out to The Economist!



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Summer stylin’(Like the silhouette and palette for Lanvin best, followed by Gucci.)

Summer stylin’
(Like the silhouette and palette for Lanvin best, followed by Gucci.)