John Ellis
Senior Member
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- Jul 16, 2006
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Keep the photos coming! I'm really enjoying how your candids capture the mood and colour of daily life.
Please keep posting! This has been one of the most enjoyable recent threads.
The key difference, in my experience (having lived on both sides of the Atlantic), is that more Britons and Europeans wear casual clothes that actually fit, whereas there is a substantial proportion of Americans who buy casual clothes that fit poorly. Young men, especially are more fashion conscious (and this may be a bad thing by SF standards
Not to be a contrarian, but I believe that with the exception perhaps of New York/Chicago/Boston/etc. British & European men's work attire is substantially better than your average American. Suit & tie are de rigueur (much fewer "business casual" offices), and the suits actually fit! When living in America I was often surprised by how many business men wore suits a size too large, loose/baggy pants, etc. Less common to see these sartorial faux pas if you're wandering around the financial districts of Edinburgh or London.
Broadly speaking having lived and worked in Europe and US I agree with you. The Brits though are much scruffier to use their word than scruffy people in most of Europe where scruffy is done with more style somehow. Suit and tie is de rigeur in most of Europe. In Britain clothes are such a class thing. It's immediately possible to tell people's social class by their clothes. Even in a wealthy environment like a city office you can tell the difference between the public school(ie. private school) product and say a smart working class kid whose made it. The smart achievers are into toning shirts and ties and suits that are a notch or two off in fit while the older money types have it more together even when they're the slob type with gravy stains on ties and lapels. Oh the nuances of the English class system.