I use a patterned top(shirt) and solid bottom(skirt/trousers).
When I wear a tartan pattern kilt, I always wear a solid color shirt.
What is a real turn off is vertical stripes on a shirt with horizontal
stripes on a skirt.
Uncle Al
Hey UA; show us some pictures -- better than a thousand words!Uncle Al wrote: ↑Mon Mar 09, 2026 9:02 pm When it comes down to patterns versus solids,
I use a patterned top(shirt) and solid bottom(skirt/trousers).
When I wear a tartan pattern kilt, I always wear a solid color shirt.
What is a real turn off is vertical stripes on a shirt with horizontal
stripes on a skirt.![]()
Uncle Al
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Yes. Something that I've noticed often makes a man wearing a skirt look odd, is if the bottom is too bright in relation to the top. It draws the viewers eye down too much.Grok wrote: ↑Mon Mar 09, 2026 6:25 pmColor theory would be an example of something that could be used by anybody. Also, guidelines regarding the use of different patterns in the same outfit.robehickman wrote: ↑Mon Mar 09, 2026 5:42 pm
Not everything she says will work on men due to different body proportions, but the general ideas work.
Both Uncle Al and Mouse show that the visual aesthetics of having half patterned and the other half plain is the optimum as it draws the attention to the patterned item, if the whole outfit was patterned then some of the attention would be lost.Mouse wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2026 12:30 pm Most of my outfits have the main colour/pattern thing as the skirt. I have done some with colour in the top and tights, when wearing a black skirt, but I am not really into patterned tops. I used to wear a lot of tops with logos, witty phrases or other stuff on them, but as I have got older, I just want to be me and not shout at the world with what is on my chest. Hence I mainly wear plain tops with a lot of them being white or black.
I now think the skirt is the main thing in my style and look, with my hat, top, legs and feet playing accompanying roles.
This is due in part to the fact that the public at large is only used to seeing men in rather boring trousers in drab colours so by keeping the skirt in a more subdued colour scheme is less of a surprise and is therefore less likely to gain as much attention and probably even invisible (seen as shorts) to some of the general public so completely uninteresting.robehickman wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2026 10:59 am In general, the skirts that I've noticed look the most natural on men are black / in other dark colours, and are not visually fussy.Basically they are not designed to pull the viewer's eye. The natural visual focus of the male body is generally the shoulders, drawing the eye elsewhere tends to look odd.