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  • Last choice: maximum roll above the collar band. 

    Last choice: maximum roll above the collar band. 

    • 1 month ago
    • 1 notes
    1 Comments
  • Do you think a bell-shaped roll is ahead of the curve?

    Do you think a bell-shaped roll is ahead of the curve?

    • 1 month ago
    • 3 notes
    3 Comments
  • Option number three. Maybe you like yours spread. 

    Option number three. Maybe you like yours spread. 

    • 1 month ago
    • 5 notes
    5 Comments
  • How about this one? The killer roll may be the most quiet one.

    How about this one? The killer roll may be the most quiet one.

    • 1 month ago
    0 Comments
  • Is this your ideal roll big and wide-open up top?  

    Is this your ideal roll big and wide-open up top?  

    • 1 month ago
    • 2 notes
    2 Comments
  • How do you roll? Let’s untangle the Great Buttondown Collar Conspiracy. 

    How do you roll? Let’s untangle the Great Buttondown Collar Conspiracy. 

    • 1 month ago
    • 9 notes
    9 Comments
  • Burn, baby, burn!

    Burn, baby, burn!

    • 1 month ago
    • 3 notes
    3 Comments
  • “This is not the chambray you’re looking for.”

    “This is not the chambray you’re looking for.”

    • 1 month ago
    • 9 notes
    9 Comments
  • Handsome bastards. It’s the blue shirts.

    Handsome bastards. It’s the blue shirts.

    • 3 months ago
    • 18 notes
    • #blue shirts
    • #tweed in the city
    • #mafoofan
    • #michael alden
    • #yukio akamine
    18 Comments
  • Authenticity.
Kensuke Ishizu was not American, and he certainly never attended an Ivy League university. Yet, in bringing Ivy style to Japan after World War II, he played a key role in safeguarding the classic manner of American dress for its eventual return to its birthplace. He was a very stylish and elegant man who understood that clothes have context and meaning. So, even though one may not be an Ivy fan, there is something important we should learn from his example.
Read on at tweedinthecity.com.

    Authenticity.

    Kensuke Ishizu was not American, and he certainly never attended an Ivy League university. Yet, in bringing Ivy style to Japan after World War II, he played a key role in safeguarding the classic manner of American dress for its eventual return to its birthplace. He was a very stylish and elegant man who understood that clothes have context and meaning. So, even though one may not be an Ivy fan, there is something important we should learn from his example.

    Read on at tweedinthecity.com.

    • 3 months ago
    • 14 notes
    • #Kensuke Ishizu
    • #Ivy style
    • #Ivy League
    • #Tweed in the City
    • #Mafoofan
    14 Comments
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