According to a recent psychology report prepared by a leading psychotherapist, Jane Firbank, a man can show if he is "more macho than he perhaps appears" or "secretly hankers back to those halcyon days of youth’, or whether he ‘loves his work’, ’wants to bring the weekend forward’….and a host of other things, by his choice of shirt.
Judging from shirts I've seen on http://www.eccentricshirts.com/, the brainchild of South West London entrepreneur, Peter Barnett, the shirts say the wearer is bold and possibly eccentric.
Barnett, who also manufactures top quality clothing for some of the UK’s leading specialist shirt retailers, many of whom are by Royal Appointment, recently launched his Spring ken's shirt collection that caught the imagination of Ms. Firbank.
The collection spans a wide spectrum, ranging from the more conventional plain (but outrageous) pink, through to the ‘extreme’ eccentric. Each shirt design is also given a "female" name. The ‘extreme’ collection consists of flamboyant floral prints of enormous roses (Rosie); tropical palms (Tikki); the ‘Help for Heroes’ Union Jack shirt (Lulu) of which £10 is being donated to the charity for every shirt sold. For the more discerning individual, there are shirts with split-windscreen ‘60s VW camper vans (Becky); with surfboards (Shruti); topping off with retro ‘60s drinks’ bottle tops (Topsy). All of the latest shirts are made in Twickenham. All the shirts are finished to high specifications and produced from fine quality two fold cotton poplin fabric and lawns.
Ms. Firbank says, “If you thought you knew the wearer of one of these shirts, there could in fact be a completely different side of them to discover. Their choice of shirt can well reveal a wilder, deeper side – it allows them to dress ‘outside the box’ offering some men the perfect opportunity for personal reinvention.
“A shirt can make a very strong statement: it shows the wearer’s personality; their hidden talents and their buried interests. It can revive their lost dreams of youth, or ones which have been put on hold for a while.”
Judging from shirts I've seen on http://www.eccentricshirts.com/, the brainchild of South West London entrepreneur, Peter Barnett, the shirts say the wearer is bold and possibly eccentric.
Barnett, who also manufactures top quality clothing for some of the UK’s leading specialist shirt retailers, many of whom are by Royal Appointment, recently launched his Spring ken's shirt collection that caught the imagination of Ms. Firbank.
The collection spans a wide spectrum, ranging from the more conventional plain (but outrageous) pink, through to the ‘extreme’ eccentric. Each shirt design is also given a "female" name. The ‘extreme’ collection consists of flamboyant floral prints of enormous roses (Rosie); tropical palms (Tikki); the ‘Help for Heroes’ Union Jack shirt (Lulu) of which £10 is being donated to the charity for every shirt sold. For the more discerning individual, there are shirts with split-windscreen ‘60s VW camper vans (Becky); with surfboards (Shruti); topping off with retro ‘60s drinks’ bottle tops (Topsy). All of the latest shirts are made in Twickenham. All the shirts are finished to high specifications and produced from fine quality two fold cotton poplin fabric and lawns.
Ms. Firbank says, “If you thought you knew the wearer of one of these shirts, there could in fact be a completely different side of them to discover. Their choice of shirt can well reveal a wilder, deeper side – it allows them to dress ‘outside the box’ offering some men the perfect opportunity for personal reinvention.
“A shirt can make a very strong statement: it shows the wearer’s personality; their hidden talents and their buried interests. It can revive their lost dreams of youth, or ones which have been put on hold for a while.”
Post Title
→Can the style of a man's shirt say a great deal about the man himself?
Post URL
→https://fashiondesignforgirl.blogspot.com/2010/04/can-style-of-man-shirt-say-great-deal.html
Visit Fashion Design For Girl for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection
No comments:
Post a Comment