New York Post

It’s not easy being preened

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products and services ready to help them out.

In addition to Well Suited, the past five years have wrought Würkin Stiffs, a “Shark Tank”featured startup offering magnets that help keep guys’ shirt collars from flopping over; the Pocket Dial, a smartphone case that doubles as a pocket square, by Jimmy Fallon for J.Crew; and a 7-month-old product called Tucked Trunks, an underwear design that promises to prevent dress shirts from spilling out of waistbands.

“You don’t want to generalize and sound sexist, but yeah [men have trouble dressing themselves],” says Vic Cipolla, a spokesman for SprezzaBox, a 3-year-old monthly subscripti­on service that offers guys an array of accessorie­s that can all be worn together. SprezzaBox’s founders were inspired by children’s clothing line Garanimals, famous for its matchy-matchy, animal-printed separates that allow kids to put together their own ensembles.

“Each box has a specific theme, so that everything that comes in a box makes sense all together,” says Cipolla. “It’s idiot-proof.”

Personal stylist Nicola Harrison says that many of the men she works with do find dressing “intimidati­ng,” particular­ly since they go to work and see their bosses in jeans and hoodies — something their fathers, who helped make casual-Friday dressing appropriat­e all week long, championed.

“It’s not really that [men] are looking for these shortcuts, but sometimes I feel like they’re losing the art of dressing well or never learned it to begin with,” says Harrison. “Fathers used to teach their sons how to dress and pass that knowledge down, but they stopped doing that as much,” she adds. “This generation doesn’t have role models or mentors they can look to for how to dress. Even movie stars — who looked so dapper in the 1950s — don’t dress like that anymore.”

That’s the case with Michael Becker, a 42-year-old who works in the hedge fund business. “[Dressing] wasn’t really something I learned about through a parent,” says the Upper East Side resident. “I think it was through moving to New York City and working in the financial world that over time I learned to take more pride in my appearance.”

Still, he has his limitation­s: “When it comes to tying ties and pocket squares, I’m probably not the most skilled.”

Other guys just don’t want to spend their mornings fussing over their outfits.

“I always liked the idea of a pocket square, but it was like, ‘Do I have time to putz around to make it look right?’ ” says Jon Joseph, an outsourcin­g exec who lives on the Upper East Side.

The 45-year-old had a change of heart when Sanders gave him a Well Suited square prototype two months ago. Now he wears them in lieu of ties to work. “It saves the minute or two it takes to [make a traditiona­l pocket square] look right,” he says. “It’s just grab and go.”

Some men’s sartorial problems are more quotidian.

Take Tucked Trunks CEO Rafael De Oliveira, who came up with the idea for the product while working as a medical biller in Westcheste­r — and struggling with his suit.

“I constantly found myself late to work, because I would tuck my shirt in, fix my hair and then, boom, my shirt was untucked again,” says the 30-year-old. He had seen guys tuck their shirts into their underwear to help, so he developed a boxer brief with slip-preventing rubbery dots on the inside of the waistband (similar to what you’d see on the bottom of kids’ grippy socks) that would keep his shirt nice and snug.

Julie Rath, founder of men’sstyle consulting firm Rath & Co., says some of these hacks are great, but others seem “gimmicky.”

“We’re all busy, and I’m all for anything a guy can do to take the internal questionin­g out of his morning and get him out the door sooner so that he can focus on what he does best,” says Rath. But “some of these . . . are more trouble than they’re worth.” Plus, some guys like having to work for style perfection.

“There is something to be said about the actual process of ‘suiting up,’ ” says James Eng, a 40-year-old arts administra­tor who lives in Chinatown. “Taking the time to get dressed and knowing throughout the night that you tied that perfect bow tie will give you that boost in confidence. And that’s probably the best accessory one can have.”

 ??  ?? Prior to creating Tucked Trunks, a line of underwear to help keep a dress shirt in place under pants, founder Rafael De Oliveira says he Googled “How to keep your shirt tucked in.”
Prior to creating Tucked Trunks, a line of underwear to help keep a dress shirt in place under pants, founder Rafael De Oliveira says he Googled “How to keep your shirt tucked in.”
 ??  ?? SprezzaBox subscriber­s receive a set of coordinati­ng accessorie­s hand-picked by personal stylists, starting at $28.
SprezzaBox subscriber­s receive a set of coordinati­ng accessorie­s hand-picked by personal stylists, starting at $28.
 ??  ?? Stylist Amanda Sanders’ pre-folded pocket squares have been worn by her celebrity clients, including Ted Danson (above).
Stylist Amanda Sanders’ pre-folded pocket squares have been worn by her celebrity clients, including Ted Danson (above).

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