Irish Independent

The complete guide to badly dressed men

Next to a stylish Barack Obama, our Bono resembled a gothic trawlerman recently. But he’s not the only Irish man who has a thing or two to learn about personal style. Bill Linnane ruffles a few feathers

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The sight of Bono dining out with the Obamas this week raised some profound questions for the Irish man. Freed from the restraints of a White House uniform, Obama was in full style mode, ditching his brown leather bomber jacket and signature mom jeans in favour of a smart black suit and crisp, open-necked white shirt, offset by his 50 shades of grey hair. Bono, who clearly got a load of All Saints vouchers for Christmas, looked like Bono. But it did make you think — how stylish are Irish men?

Back in the Nineties, Paul Costelloe made the shock announceme­nt that Irish women didn’t have style. We were horrified, and there was alarm around the country as Irish mammies realised that Paul wasn’t their fashion messiah, but rather a very naughty boy.

Things did improve after that, but the male counterpar­t has stalled in his fashion evolution. The younger generation has taken a giant leap forward in the fashion stakes, being born in an era with the confidence to wear espadrille­s to a ploughing championsh­ip, but for many Irish men, we are still making some basic errors. Let’s start from the ground up.

SHOES

The average Irish man’s idea of dress shoes are some sort of chunky boot, as you never know when you might need to dig a ditch or cross several miles of rough terrain on foot, even though you are an accountant at a breakfast briefing in a four-star hotel. Our problem with shoes sums up the entire dilemma — not knowing how dressy is too dressy, or what dressy actually is. Do we dress like a slick tech billionair­e, like Obama did, or do we just show up to events dressed like a gothic trawlerman, like Bono did? For most of us, the latter is the safer option. You don’t want that most dreaded of reactions — ‘who does yer man think he is?’ Thus you think those Rockports from 2003 are just the ticket.

JEANS

Even Obama, America’s Coolest President, makes mistakes in the jean department, having been photograph­ed several times in his mom jeans — highwaiste­d, shapeless, saggy mom jeans. Irish men would never make such a mistake, wearing as they do a pair of bootcut jeans in the style of 1996. Bootcut jeans, with their slight flare at the end, are a great idea in a country that is 90pc puddle. This enables your knees to keep hydrated as the water seeps halfway up your leg. They come in a variety of options, from dark denim — ideal for the afters of a wedding or the funeral of someone you didn’t really like — to the classic stonewashe­d, which makes you look like a vacationin­g Russian oligarch (you hope). Most important is that you wear them one size too small, so the world knows that you’ve still got it. ‘It’ being ‘a large arse’.

SHIRTS

A shiny Ben Sherman shirt is a handy way of telling the world that you are past your prime. Nothing says ‘larging it in 1999’ like a well-washed shirt with flaccid collars, open to the sternum. You call it your lucky shirt, because every time you wore it out you somehow got home safely. You think it makes you look a bit like Gary Lineker, but with its bright colours and your large gut, it really makes you look more like a spinnaker.

T-SHIRTS

T-shirts are for the under-25s and those with superior physiques. For the rest of us they are like the flashing age alarms in Logan’s Run, highlighti­ng our muscle wastage and the grim passage of time since we bought the T-shirt at the Something Happens Irish Tour (it spells a swear word!) in 1991. Something did happen — we got old.

SUITS

There is a vast chasm between what the Irish male considers ‘welldresse­d’ and ‘actually putting on a suit’. Most of us still suffer from PCSD, or Post Confirmati­on Suit Disorder, where we will do anything possible to avoid putting on a suit. Heightenin­g this is the modern trend of the fitted suit. Most suits we own are fitted, as we bought them ten years ago and wore them twice — to get a wife and a mortgage, in that order. Fitted suits are great for the fey flaneur, wasting away from galloping consumptio­n as they exist on a diet of free jazz and Proust. The husky Irish male was

not born with skinny genes, so when Daniel Craig dons his shiny, tiny suits, we are under pressure to try and shoehorn ourselves into a glistening cocoon of polyester. Try to stick with classic fit, which along with classic rock, classic cars and golf classics are all signs that you will soon be dead, and nobody wants to be buried in a suit that makes them look like a black pudding that got stepped on.

HATS

These are varying degrees of ‘no’.

The trad cap: You will either look like a HealyRae, never taking off the cap even as they battle hordes of Triffid-like rhododendr­ons, or you will look like a tourist, and thus get overcharge­d for taxis and pints, which, frankly, is more than you deserve. The stylish hat: You think you look ‘fedorable’ but instead you look like someone who talks during movies and doesn’t wash their hands after using the bathroom. The baseball cap: You look like Larry Murphy. Hopefully trailblaze­rs like Paul Galvin — who show that it is possible to be both brutally Irish and fabulously stylish — will inspire us all to make the grumbling move from pints of porter to pret a porter.

 ??  ?? THE SLICK LOOK BARACK OBAMA THE BOOTCUT JEANS RYAN TUBRIDY THE #FEDORABLE HAT ROBERT SHEEHAN THE ‘DRESSY’ BOOT RONAN KEATING
THE SLICK LOOK BARACK OBAMA THE BOOTCUT JEANS RYAN TUBRIDY THE #FEDORABLE HAT ROBERT SHEEHAN THE ‘DRESSY’ BOOT RONAN KEATING
 ??  ?? THE GOTHIC TRAWLERMAN BONO
THE GOTHIC TRAWLERMAN BONO
 ??  ?? THE ANTI-AGEING T-SHIRT BAZ ASHMAWY THE TOO-TIGHT TAILORING CONOR McGREGOR THE MAN CLEAVAGE COLIN FARRELL
THE ANTI-AGEING T-SHIRT BAZ ASHMAWY THE TOO-TIGHT TAILORING CONOR McGREGOR THE MAN CLEAVAGE COLIN FARRELL
 ??  ?? THE ‘HEALY-RAE’ AL PORTER
THE ‘HEALY-RAE’ AL PORTER

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