Building A Wardrobe On A Budget
Here's a PM I sent to someone a while ago who wanted advice on how to start a wardrobe on the cheap.
For anyone else who could use it:
"Okay, XXXXXX. Let's do this.
If you're going to start building a wardrobe from scratch, its important to buy pieces you'll wear often. Its also important that these pieces fit in a general palette, so they go with most of the clothing you own. For most men, I think a good basic pallets is black/white/gray/navy/beige or khaki. You could get dressed in the dark and look good. More importantly, this stuff will get used often, so you'll get your money's worth. For all of this stuff, fit is of highest importance. Buy clothes that are form fitting, but not tight. Even in the winter, when you'll be layering clothes, you'll look good.
Here's a basic template. Start with buying whichever pieces you think you'll wear most often:
White button-up shirt
Blue button-up shirt
Flat-front khakis or chinos (straight leg)
Dark blue denim jeans (straight leg, no pocket embellishments)
Navy, grey, or beige cardigan or v-neck sweater
Navy sport coat
Grey tweed or flannel sport coat
Black shoes (cap-toe or oxford)
Brown shoes (cap-toe or oxford)
White sneakers (like the Adidas Rod Lavers or Stan Smiths)
Grey t-shirt (American Apparel 50/50 blend is best)
Khaki-colored mac or raincoat
Slim, not skinny ties (about 2 1/2" at widest point)
These things will be appropriate both at work and out on the town. From here, you can start to add colors and patterns. But this is the basic set up. You can dress all of this stuff up or down.
Its best to try stuff on. For basics like shirts, you can buy multiples. You can never really have enough white dress shirts or grey t-shirts.
This is what you should be going for-
A few shopping suggestions:
Uniqlo is good for cheap basics. Dress shirts, sweaters, etc.
http://www.uniqlo.com/us/explorer.ht...:category/d:6/
JCrew is classic american styling and semi-affordable
Also look at Gap, Banana Republic, or H&M
Urban Outfitters is good for pants.
Keep reading fashion mags like GQ or Esquire. The friends who make fun of me for this are the same ones who solicit advice and send me picture texts of stuff they're considering buying.
Well, that's a starting point. I hope that this was helpful. Feel free to ask me anything or ignore anything I've said.
Best,
Chase"
Got some cash
Bought some wheels
Took it out
'Cross the fields
Lost Control
Hit a wall
But we're alright
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