Q Is there a way to have the cuffs on my shirts turned into French cuffs? I have a number of pairs of cuff links and only one shirt to wear them with, and would rather change some of the non-French ...
Q In your column in the Democrat-Gazette, you wrote about French cuffs. I have many French cuff shirts and a lot of cuff links -- I love them! I did detect one imprecision in your column: You lumped ...
Recently I have taken a liking to French cuffs (shirts with cufflinks). Now there are two ways to wear them: with the inners of both sides kissing or in the regular barrel arrangement. <BR><BR>What do ...
Q I've always liked to wear French cuffs. They made me feel professional and encouraged me to act as a professional. Pondering your query about my background, the best I can explain: Growing up in ...
We've been talking work fashion lately, and it inspired me to dig through an old shopping bag full of stuff I'd brushed off as uncool (and reminded me to regularly count my blessings that I can wear ...
I’m siding with Ascot Chang on this one. French cuffs are a dressed-up look. It’s fine to work in your shirtsleeves, but when you hit the streets your French cuffs should be peeking proudly from under ...
...and Wow! <BR><BR>French cuffs are awesome. I have fairly long arms, so I am constantly irritated by most shirts. The cuffs on most shirts are so tight (even using the longer length buttons) that ...
About a half inch of “linen“ should show beyond the sleeve of the jacket when the arm is at one’s side. When no shirt shows at the wrist, the arms tend to look long and ape-like, a problem George W.
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