Tailors Tips

Well hello there, let me introduce myself, My name is Charles Ponsenby-Smythe, your online tailor.
My page is here to offer dressing and etiquette tips to all you gentlemen.

Tip of the Week:

A Chap and His Hat

I recently recieved a wire from a good friend, who suggested our latest tip should concern that essential element of gentlemanly dress, the humble hat:


My dearest chaps,
please find enclosed my humble offerings for your tailors tips page.
yours,
like my martini's, stirred but never shaken,
Paul Mountebank-SmytheHats:

No Gentleman of any repute should ever consider consider leaving his
residence without a hat placed firmly on his head.
As well as keeping the head warm and free of rain it serves a number of
other useful purposes. Firstly it distinguishes one as a man of taste
and refinement, quite separate from the hoards of wage slaves forced
into odious nylon two-piece affairs. Secondly should one find one self
the subject of the unwonted attention of overhead CCTV cameras, one
merely has to pull forward the brim in a suitably rakish manner and hey
presto! a darkening shadow is cast over your face. You will also find
that this maneuver works wonders when attempting to charm the ladies.

Absolutely my dear Paul,
however I would offer a couple of words of warning to those hat virgins amongst our ranks.

As everyone knows there are a great many styles of hat to choose from, this however should not be seen as something to celebrate. The contemporary world of hats is a veritable minefield, far from instantly and automatically bestowing the wearer with an aura of superiority, you can simply look a bloody fool.

Best then stick to a couple of old favourites, the faithful trilby (pictured above) and the bowler (below).

Personally I tend to stick to the trilby myself, versatile and suave in comparison to the rigid and business like bowler. However the choice is yours my old bean.

Past Tailors Tips

The Great Button Dialemma