Posts tagged Denim Jeans
Partywear for adult men: there are no policies
Nov 26th
Party time will soon be upon us and self confidence about how you appear is 50 percent the battle when it comes to conquering nerves. Turning heads and providing an assured air happens with self confidence and if you are content with the way you look, you will be ready to get into the party with a swagger. For men, there are no rules on codes of dress. In fact, just aboutĀ anything goes. Most parties are casual, so should you want to go for a formal suit and tie combo then you can. It’s up to you.
If you are attending a fancy gown get together be more creative thanĀ turning up in a bed sheet and claiming to be a ghost – no-one will be fooled! Worse still, turn up at any fancy dress in civvies and you will feel awkward. Everyone else could be dressed as pirates or seventies rock stars but even in your smartest casual shirt, you will be the one who feels excluded!
Equally, if invited to a formal black tie celebration then it’s recommended t you consider adhering to some of the principles. A dinner jacket and trouser combination with a stiff formal white shirt may not be required, but from donning a dickie bow or a lounge suit and tie, you do just fine. For casual gatherings just about anything goes.
If you were turning up to a party at a nightclub 20 years back wearing denim jeans, it would have been a guaranteed way to be denied entry. In-trend denim jeans are now considerably more pricey than trousers. There was a time when they were deemed ‘not smart’. As such, the person sporting them would be instructed to ‘go and put on some thing wise.’
Jeans are very much the in thing, which is just as well as most places would be half-empty if the ‘old rules’ applied. But over the chilly festive year, putting on layers could be a smart partywear technique.
Finally do take a look at the most recent outfits of pirate costume now appearing in shops and stores. The styles are really moving on and depicting 2011 styles in the traditional retro look.
