Well, there we have it, a skirted suit. Visually it is hard to tell from the images if they are kilts, so in your mind replace them with any other straight skirt, and wella! There you have instant skirted suits.Ray wrote:These designs work for me.
One other thing I was thinking; I'm looking to buy a pinstripe kilt suit. It's a three piece suit, with matching waistcoat. One thing I wanted to to was move away from the kilt shoes - for example, winter wear. I currently have a friend (who sells, or is about to sell, womens shoes online) who is looking out for mens knee high boots that would compliment a kilt. I'm thinking something like riding boots - very masculine, as befits the sturdiness of a kilt, yet at the same time, finely tailored, as befits a contemporary black/pinstripe kilt.
See attached for an image of the suit. It's not cheap, but my goodness; it looks good to my eyes.
http://www.21stcenturykilts.co.uk/discountedpackage.htm
i think the only real things keeping skirted suits from the male public is price, ( but for executives no problem, they earn enough, and probably spend bags of money on men's suits any way) and teh very fact that I think that for men's skirted suits to get off the ground, no matter what type of suit, that there be some tailor made, to fit the individual perfectly, as suits should, and then be worn at functions which get some publicity. With some made for different body types, representative of the type of men who would generally be wearing suits, thus also older men who may also be getting somewhat heavier with age. Not only perfect men. As when any suit is worn, that does not fit right, male of female, it doesn't look right and detracts from the whole concept.