Corroded@leminal.spaceEnglish
3 monthsAre neckties and polo shirts a thing?
I can only really picture a car sales person or Mac from It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia wearing it
SatyrSack@quokk.auEnglish
3 monthsAnd enough common scents to wear two colognes for a special occasion

- NachBarcelona@piefed.socialEnglish3 months
I think for people who are utterly confused abouteverything, that’s definitely an option
- 3 months
Collars are for comfort. A fold of fabric feels better on your skin than a seam or a fabric edge.
- [deleted]@piefed.worldEnglish3 months
Collars have a seam in the same place as something like a t-shirt. I even find polos to be less confortable than a t-shirt around the neck.
Collars exist to keep neckties from being directly on the skin, and that would be uncomfortable.
- village604@adultswim.fanEnglish3 months
That doesn’t really track since a T-shirt is more comfortable than a collared shirt.
Not anymore, but when collars were first added to clothing it was for comfort. It was in the mid 1400s, and clergy wore really stiff tunics with high necks, so they started wearing collared shirts underneath them for comfort. Shirts were also exclusively undergarments at the time.
After those came the big ruffly Elizabethan collars for wealth/status symbols, then detachable collars (shirts were still underwear!), and then WWI happened, and soldiers were issued soft shirts instead of stiff outer clothes as outerwear since it was more practical. That then leads us to the collared shirts of today because that preference came to civilian life from the war.
TheReturnOfPEB@reddthat.comEnglish
3 monthsmake a reservation at a fancy restaurant and show up in flannel pajamas, jacket, necktie, shoes heck throw and in spats and a monocle and i’ll watch this space










